Hungary in legal challenge over EU migrant quotas
Hungary's prime minister has said the country is filing a lawsuit against the European Union objecting to a mandatory plan to distribute migrants among members of the bloc.
Viktor Orban said the suit would be filed at the European Court of Justice. The EU is looking redistribute 120,000 asylum seekers already in the bloc among its 28 countries.
Parliament last month approved legislation obliging the government to challenge the EU quotas, while Mr Orban has repeatedly said that Brussels overstepped its authority when it approved the scheme despite opposition from a handful of mainly Eastern European countries.
Mr Orban earlier also described the migrant quotas as "illegal, unreasonable and unfair" and said it was wrong to force countries to take in migrants against their will.
Robert Fico, the prime minister of neighbouring Slovakia, said that his country had filed its own complaint against the EU quotas.
Meanwhile, at least two people have been injured during clashes between groups of migrants and refugees on the Greek-Macedonian border.
A man believed to be from Morocco died after touching high-power overhead railway cables when he climbed on top of a train carriage.
Macedonia...