Hungary’s Orban says EU didn’t learn from terror attacks

(AP) The Hungarian government has expanded its new public campaign accusing European Union leaders of promoting mass migration, sending citizens a letter from the prime minister that warns “the Brussels bureaucrats want to break the resistance of countries opposed to immigration.”

In the one-page letter mailed to households in Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orban said the EU “has not learned anything from the horrible terror attacks of the past years” and “wants to bring even more migrants to Europe” through new measures now under development.

A separate sheet mailed with the note listed seven alleged EU policies that Orban claimed encourage migration. They include weakening member states’ rights to border protection; giving more money to “political activist groups” that support migration; cutting financial assistance to countries viewed as anti-migration; and giving migrants prepaid bank cards.

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