Hungary's Orban wants to speed up construction of border fence
Hungary's prime minister vowed Tuesday to speed up the construction of an anti-migrants fence on its southern border as it emerged that the defence minister had quit because of the slow pace.
Viktor Orban paid a snap visit to the border late Monday to check on progress, later telling an online newspaper that he was convinced "the works in progress have to be sped up".
"Everyone has to get ready to do intensive work in the coming weeks," Orban said in an interview with the Magyar Idok website published Tuesday.
Hungary's border with Serbia has become a major crossing point into the European Union, with more than 160,000 entering Hungary so far this year including 2,706 on Monday alone, police said.
Most then seek to travel onwards to Germany via Austria. This weekend some 16,000 did so as Hungarian buses brought them to the border and Berlin and Vienna agreed to let the migrants go through.
A razor-wire barrier along the 175-kilometre (110-mile) frontier was completed on August 29, but has failed to stop large numbers of people climbing over or under it.
Hungary is therefore building an additional fence four metres (13 feet) high despite widespread criticism, with France's foreign minister saying the barrier does "not respect European values".
On Monday Csaba Hende resigned as defence minister after a meeting of the National Security Council to review progress on the fence.
No reason was given but a senior politician close to Orban said that Hende's resignation was tied to the pace of the construction of the security fence, which the prime minister was not satisfied with.
Hende's replacement as defence minister said meanwhile Tuesday that the fence was a "top priority".