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Explosives Found in Serbia Near Gas Pipeline Supplying Hungary, Leaders Say

BUDAPEST/BELGRADE, April 5 (Reuters) – Explosives of “devastating power” ⁠were ⁠found near the ⁠Turkstream pipeline in Serbia that carries Russian natural ​gas to Hungary and beyond, leaders from the two countries said ‌on Sunday.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor ‌Orban said Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic told him that ⁠explosives had ⁠been found near the pipeline, which transports Russian gas ​through the Balkans to Central and Eastern Europe.

“Our units found an explosive of devastating power,” Vucic, a close ally of Orban, said ​in a post on Instagram. “I told PM Orban that we ⁠would ⁠keep him updated on ⁠the ​investigation.”

Orban, who held a phone call with Vucic, said in a ​Facebook post he ⁠had called an extraordinary defence council meeting on Sunday.

The incident comes a week before pivotal elections on April 12 in Hungary where nationalist Orban fights to hold onto his more ⁠than 16-year grip on power, with his party trailing the ⁠opposition Tisza party in polls.

Orban had in February scaled up security around energy infrastructure in the country. He has upped the stakes in the election saying that it was a choice between war or peace.

Budapest has also been in a dispute with Ukraine over a halt in oil supplies via the Druzhba pipeline. Orban’s ⁠Fidesz party has sought to associate opposition leader Peter Magyar with Brussels and Ukraine, suggesting that voting for his Tisza party means voting for tanks and war.

(Reporting by ​Krisztina Than; Writing by Edward McAllister; Editing by ​Hugh Lawson and Helen Popper)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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