Prime Minister Viktor Orbán inaugurated the new Budapest Music Center in Budapest on Saturday night. The Center includes several studios, an auditorium, music library, information centre, study room, jazz club and restaurant.
Regarding the critics of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán declared that the Government listens to everyone, but will not give up Hungarian national sovereignty.
State debt has decreased compared to both 2010 and 2012 figures, said Government Spokesperson András Giró-Szász in response to comments from the Socialist Party, that public debt had become “unprecedentedly” high.
State Secretary for Foreign Affairs and External Economic Relations Péter Szijjártó and Head of the Kuwaiti Investment Office Osama Al-Ayoub held talks in Budapest on Kuwaiti investment opportunities in Hungary.
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán declared at the Puskás Suzuki Cup, the international football recruitment tournament, that the future of every country is shaped by its youth, and that this reinforces the importance of the Government regarding sports as a priority.
Following talks with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir Titov on Hungarian-Russian economic relations, State Secretary for Foreign Affairs and External Economic Relations Péter Szijjártó announced at a press briefing that Hungary is planning to open a trade house, comprising of an investment centre and a logistics warehouse, in Moscow in the middle of April.
Péter Szijjártó, State Secretary for External Economic Relations, held talks on Monday with his Brazilian counterpart Vera Lucia Barrouin Crivano Machado on boosting economic cooperation between the two countries.
Today in the Parliament building, Deputy State Secretary for International Communications Ferenc Kumin held a short lecture for a group of Swedish students visiting Hungary within the framework of a short study visit.
Producers of foreign films have spent more than HUF 75 billion (EUR 244 million) in Hungary over the past two years, government commissioner for the film industry Andrew G. Vajna told Magyar Nemzet daily.
The government is ready for a debate with the European Union on the constitutional amendment, the government spokesman told public radio. András Giró-Szász neither confirmed nor denied press reports that the Prime Minister had told participants of last week’s EU summit that he would accept the assessments and observations of the European Commission but not of any member states.