Signal packet/Home/Wire/Diplomacy
DiplomacyHungaryHighScore 7.0

Hungary reverses decision to exit International Criminal Court, scrapping process begun under Viktor Orban

Hungary reversed its decision to withdraw from the International Criminal Court, a process started by former leader Viktor Orban.

Quick reaction

One tap helps tune what we surface next.

Reader discussion

Public comments
0/1000

No comments yet. Start the discussion around this signal.

Follow this signal

Get updates on this story

We will email you if this changes materially. No spam. Daily brief optional.

Map context

Open map near Hungary

Keep the story in context with nearby live signals, countries, and category movement.

Open live map

Related coverage

More story pages

Hungary parliament votes to reverse ICC withdrawal, blocking exit days before it was to take effect. Orbán initiated withdrawal during Netanyahu visit; ICC has warrant for Netanyahu over Gaza war crimes.

Hungary's parliament voted to reverse Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's 2025 decision to withdraw from the International Criminal Court, stopping the exit just days before it was set to take effect. Orbán had announced the withdrawal during a visit by Benjamin Netanyahu, who is wanted by the ICC over war crimes committed during Israel's genocide in Gaza.

Poland summons Russian ambassador after Moscow's deadly strikes on Kyiv. Polish Foreign Ministry says Moscow trying to intimidate Ukrainians and foreign residents.

Following Moscow's deadly strikes on Kyiv, the Polish Foreign Ministry summoned the Russian ambassador to Poland. Poland's top diplomat stated Moscow is attempting to intimidate Ukrainian officials, citizens, and foreign residents.

Israeli Channel 12 reports proposed Iran war deal would relocate US military aircraft from Ben Gurion Airport to Europe within 72 hours.

Israeli Channel 12 reports that a proposed agreement to end the war on Iran includes evacuating all U.S. military aircraft from Ben Gurion Airport within 72 hours and relocating them to bases in Europe while remaining on standby.

China says Panama ties should not be subject to third-party interference, Xinhua reports.

China stated that relations with Panama should not be subject to interference from third parties, according to a report by state news agency Xinhua.

More live signals

Continue with the live feed.

The fastest nearby updates load from the public feed, not the enriched story endpoint.

Continue with live feed

Monitor

Track follow-ups in Monitor

Turn this public story into a watchlist seed for matching future signals, team alerts, and operational routing.

Signals API

Use these signals via API

Evaluate structured event payloads, canonical URLs, categories, geo fields, and confidence metadata for your own workflows.