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Hungary to lay on buses to border for refugee marchers

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Hungary said late Friday it would lay on buses to take thousands of migrants walking towards Austria on the motorway to the border town of Hegyeshalom if they wanted.

Around 100 buses would be laid on, with rides also offered to more than a thousand migrants staying at a makeshift refugee camp at Budapest's Keleti station.

"During the night, buses will be brought to Keleti train station and to the M1 motorway where transport to the Hegyeshalom border crossing will be offered to the migrants," Prime Minister Viktor Orban's chief-of-staff Janos Lazar told a press conference.

"The top priority is that Hungary's transport should not be crippled," said Lazar, explaining the decision.

A crowd of migrants put by police at 2,500, including people in wheelchairs and on crutches, set off at noon determined to get to the Austrian border some 175 kilometres (110 miles) away.

The bus transport does not automatically mean that the migrants can leave the country, he added.

"The government is waiting for the Austrian government's standpoint on entry and exit conditions," Lazar said.

Earlier some of the migrants flashed victory signs as they walked along the motorway while others carried pictures of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who recently eased asylum rules for Syrians, as police looked on without intervening.

Hungary said late Friday it would lay on buses to take thousands of migrants walking towards Austria on the motorway to the border town of Hegyeshalom if they wanted.

Around 100 buses would be laid on, with rides also offered to more than a thousand migrants staying at a makeshift refugee camp at Budapest’s Keleti station.

“During the night, buses will be brought to Keleti train station and to the M1 motorway where transport to the Hegyeshalom border crossing will be offered to the migrants,” Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s chief-of-staff Janos Lazar told a press conference.

“The top priority is that Hungary’s transport should not be crippled,” said Lazar, explaining the decision.

A crowd of migrants put by police at 2,500, including people in wheelchairs and on crutches, set off at noon determined to get to the Austrian border some 175 kilometres (110 miles) away.

The bus transport does not automatically mean that the migrants can leave the country, he added.

“The government is waiting for the Austrian government’s standpoint on entry and exit conditions,” Lazar said.

Earlier some of the migrants flashed victory signs as they walked along the motorway while others carried pictures of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who recently eased asylum rules for Syrians, as police looked on without intervening.

AFP
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