Hungary PM Viktor Orban says immigration to Europe is a threat, and must be stopped

BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Immigration to Europe should be largely halted, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said late on Sunday, demanding a robust European Union response to last week's killings in France.

Mr Orban was speaking after attending a mass rally in Paris to pay tribute to 17 people killed in attacks launched by a trio of Islamist extremists, who were born in France to immigrant families.

The deadly attacks look certain to bolster anti-immigration movements around Europe, and Mr Orban, who has called for migration curbs in the past, said it was time for Brussels to get tough. "We should not look at economic immigration as if it had any use, because it only brings trouble and threats to European people," he told state television. "Therefore, immigration must be stopped. That's the Hungarian stance."

The only exception, he said, should be for people claiming political asylum. "Hungary will not become a target destination for immigrants," he said. "We will not allow it, at least as long as I am prime minister and as long as this government is in power."

Mr Orban's right-wing government was elected for a second-consecutive term last year.

The prime minister said minorities living in Hungary, which has a population of some 10 million, posed no particular problem. "We do not want to see a significant minority among ourselves that has different cultural characteristics and background. We would like to keep Hungary as Hungary," he added.

According to the national statistics office, some 350,000 Hungarians live and worked abroad, most of them in Germany, Britain and Austria.

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