
ArmInfo. Hungary's government will stop issuing worker visas to employees from the Philippines, Georgia and Armenia from Friday, as stated by government spokeswoman Vanda Szondi.
She described this step as the first step in a policy to regulate the influx of foreign labor. Szondi stated that attracting foreign workers to Hungary is pushing down local salaries and reducing employment opportunities. Citizens of the Philippines, Georgia, and Armenia already working in Hungary will still be able to apply for extensions of their permits, Georgia's Channel One reports.
According to Reuters, official statistics indicate that foreign workers make up only about 2% of Hungary's workforce, but some sectors, such as services and manufacturing, rely heavily on labor from abroad.
Recall, diplomatic relations between Armenia and Hungary were frozen after Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban reinstated Ramil Safarov as a national "hero" to Azerbaijan in 2012, having hacked to death Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan with an axe. Margaryan was undergoing military training in Hungary.
Ten years later, in December 2022, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan met with his Hungarian counterpart, Peter Szijjarto, on the sidelines of the 29th OSCE Ministerial Meeting. Following the meeting, the two sides agreed to restore full diplomatic relations, expressing their intention to open a new chapter in Armenian-Hungarian relations based on mutual trust and respect for international law. In May 2023, Armenia appointed Ashot Smbatyan as a non-resident ambassador to Hungary.