BREAKING: Visegrád Leaders Reject EU Migration Pact The leaders of Slovakia, Hungary, Czech Republic and Poland — Robert Fico, Viktor Orbán, Andrej Babiš, and Karol Nawrocki — have spoken out together against Brussels’ new EU Migration Pact, calling it a “dictate, not solidarity.” Under the pact, EU countries would be forced to either accept relocated migrants or pay €20,000 per rejected migrant — a plan that critics say punishes nations for defending their own borders. Fico declared: “You cannot force a country to pay for every migrant. That’s not solidarity — that’s coercion.” Their message resonates across Central Europe — yet the debate remains complex. While illegal migration threatens sovereignty and security, the reality of legal migration, demographic decline, and labor shortages also challenge many Slavic nations. Should the Visegrád countries completely reject Brussels’ plan — or propose their own Slavic solution to manage Migration on their terms?

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