National Post

Muscovites hit beaches via travel loophole

- Henry Meyer and Irina Reznik

Muscovites desperate for a summer holiday abroad this year have found a loophole that’s letting them evade Russia’s coronaviru­s ban on foreign travel. A loophole that involves a 14- hour round trip via Belarus.

Travellers are exploiting the soft border between the two former- Soviet neighbours. Russians can drive to Minsk with minimal checks, and once there they can make use of Belarus’s more liberal COVID- 19 restrictio­ns.

“Since the quarantine, Minsk has become a Casablanca, the main crossroads for Russians who want to leave the country,” said Maxim Valetskiy, a Russian businessma­n with an Israeli passport and family in London, who has used the detour four times since the Kremlin halted foreign travel at the end of March.

Russians have been advised to stay put this summer even as other coronaviru­s restrictio­ns are loosened, as the government deals with the fourth- highest infection rate in the world.

Domestic travel within Russia’ s 17 million-square-kilometre territory is mostly allowed, but many are put off by the country’s underdevel­oped and crowded tourist resorts.

Russians aren’t the only ones seeking out cumbersome detours to work around coronaviru­s restrictio­ns that have slashed internatio­nal travel this summer. Stanley Johnson, the British Prime Minister’s father, has been criticized for using Bulgaria as an air bridge to visit his villa in Greece, which had restrictio­ns on visitors from the U.K.

“I want to go on holiday where I choose, and that’s certainly not on the Black Sea in Russia,” said Elena Venediktov­a, a 44 year- old real estate broker in Moscow, who has booked a twoweek holiday via Belarus in the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Hurgada from Aug. 1. “Europe may be off limits but there are lots of other seaside destinatio­ns. You just have to make a slight effort.”

The loophole is proving to be a boon to Belarusian tour operators in a disastrous year for most of the global holiday industry. Minsk- based Travel House has seen a surge in reservatio­ns from Russians for package holidays in Turkey and Egypt since those countries opened their borders July 1. All of the trips are run through Belavia, Belarus’s state-owned airline.

“The demand is huge — all the flights to Egypt and Turkey are booked solid beyond mid- July,” said Yury Surkov, Travel House’s commercial director, who estimates that Russians will soon make up about 40 per cent of flights from Belarus to major tourist destinatio­ns.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov acknowledg­ed on state TV late that the loophole exists, but said that the Kremlin isn’t planning to close it.

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