Hungarian haulers have followed their Polish and Slovakian colleagues by demanding that the EU stops favoring Ukrainian firms
Hungarian truckers staged a demonstration on Monday near a checkpoint at the border with Ukraine and are slowing down any trucks attempting to go in or out of the country. They are demanding that Brussels introduces quotas on Ukrainian freight trucks entering the EU.
According to the M1 TV channel, personal cars and buses are being allowed through the Zahony-Csop checkpoint, but demonstrators are only permitting two trucks per hour to cross the border in each direction. As a result, Hungarian police estimate that the waiting time for cars and buses at the Zahony-Csop checkpoint is currently 30 to 60 minutes, while trucks may have to wait more than 48 hours to leave the country.
The tailbacks at the strategic Carpathian route through the Hungary-Ukraine border have prompted police to redirect some trucks to Romania, where there is also now a kilometer-long traffic jam, as reported by the Hungarian news outlet Utinform.
The haulers’ demonstration had been sanctioned by the police, which allowed about a dozen trucks to partially block the road leading to the crossing. However, there has been no information about exactly how long the partial blockade would last. Some media outlets have reported that the measures could last until the end of the month.
The Zahony-Csop crossing protest follows similar demonstrations in Poland and Slovakia in recent weeks, where truckers have also been blocking border crossings with Ukraine, demanding that Brussels restore a permit system for Ukrainian freight carriers crossing into the EU.
The European haulers have insisted that they were being undercut by their colleagues from Ukraine, who were exempted from seeking permits to cross into the bloc after the outbreak of fighting between Russia and Ukraine last year.
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On Monday, however, Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister and Infrastructure Minister Aleksandr Kubrakov announced that Polish truckers have supposedly agreed to lift their blockade at the Jahodyn-Dorohusk crossing, which had been closed since November 6.
Last week, the border blockades in Poland and Slovakia resulted in more than 1,500 trucks being stuck at the crossing between Ukraine and Hungary, forming a 22-kilometer-long line of trucks seeking alternative ways to enter the EU.
In November, members of the International Road Transport Union from Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, and Lithuania sent a joint letter to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, urging her to review the agreement that allows traffic privileges for Ukrainian drivers. The deal is due to expire next June.
However, von der Leyen has insisted that re-introducing permits or quotas for road transport from Ukraine is not legally possible, as it would violate the current agreement between Brussels and Kiev.
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