Hungary has summoned Russia’s ambassador following Moscow’s latest mass drone attack on Ukraine, marking the first time Budapest has taken such a step over Russian strikes on Ukraine’s Zakarpattia region, home to a sizeable ethnic Hungarian community.
Hungarian Prime Minister Péter Magyar said on Wednesday that Foreign Minister Anita Orbán had summoned the Russian ambassador for a meeting on Thursday, May 14, after Russian drones struck targets in western Ukraine.
“The Hungarian government strongly condemns the Russian attack against Transcarpathia, which is also inhabited by Hungarians,” Magyar said after the first meeting of his new government, according to Hungarian outlet Telex.
The attack was part of a massive Russian barrage across Ukraine on Wednesday. Russia launched at least 800 drones in a daytime assault that killed at least six people and prompted Poland to scramble fighter jets.
Magyar said strikes hit Mukachevo, Uzhhorod, Soliv, and several smaller towns in Zakarpattia. Hungarian railway workers at Chop station near the Hungarian border were sent to shelters and later brought safely into Hungary.
The move represents a sharp shift in Budapest’s approach toward Moscow. Under former Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, Hungary maintained close relations with Russia despite its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Orbán lost power in April, and Magyar’s new government has taken a markedly different tone toward Moscow.
Ukraine’s Zakarpattia Oblast, also known as Transcarpathia, borders Hungary and is home to Ukraine’s ethnic Hungarian minority. Hungarian officials said the drone strikes damaged infrastructure, including a transformer, a railway station in Svaliava, and an industrial facility in Uzhhorod.