Hartford Courant

EU to tighten travel rules for Russians to enter bloc

Members fail to establish visa ban 6 months after Putin’s invasion of Ukraine

- By Lorne Cook

PRAGUE — European Union countries agreed Wednesday to make it harder for Russian citizens to enter the 27-nation bloc, but they failed to find a consensus on imposing a tourist ban in response to Russia’s war on Ukraine.

At talks in the Czech Republic, EU foreign ministers were desperate to put on a show of unity and punish President Vladimir Putin for launching the war more than six months ago. Still, they couldn’t bridge difference­s over whether Russian citizens, some of them possibly opposed to the Feb. 24 invasion, should also pay a price.

The plan now is to make it more time-consuming and costly for Russian citizens to obtain short-term visas to enter Europe’s passport-free travel zone — a 26-country area made up of most of the EU members plus Iceland, Liechtenst­ein, Norway and Switzerlan­d known as the Schengen area.

The move will be done by freezing a 2007 agreement to ease travel between Russia and Europe. The EU already tightened visa restrictio­ns on Russian officials and businesspe­ople under the accord in May.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, speaking after chairing the meeting in Prague, said that an increasing number of Russians have been arriving in Europe since mid-july, some “for shopping as if no war is raging in Ukraine.”

This, he said, “has become a security risk” for European countries bordering Russia.

Borrell said he believed the additional delays will result in fewer visas being issued.

Students, journalist­s and those who fear for their safety in Russia would still be able to acquire visas. The move would have no immediate affect on the estimated 12 million visas already issued to Russian citizens, but EU officials will look into what could be done to freeze them.

Calls have mounted from Poland and the Baltic countries — Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania — but also Denmark for a broader ban on Russian tourists.

The foreign ministers of Estonia and Latvia said that they may push ahead with further visa restrictio­ns, citing national security concerns.

“We need to immediatel­y ramp up the price to Putin’s regime,” Estonian Foreign Minister Urmas Reinsalu said. “The loss of time is paid by the blood of Ukrainians.”

Uniform rules are supposed to apply across the 26 countries that make up Europe’s passport free travel area, but Reinsalu said that “it’s our national competence, under the principle of national security, to decide the issues of entry to our soil.”

Over the years, several countries have reintroduc­ed border controls for security reasons in the Schengen area, in which Europeans and visitors can travel freely without identifica­tion checks.

The foreign minister of Finland, which shares the EU’S longest border with Russia, underlined that his country would, as of Thursday, slash the number of visas being delivered to Russian citizens to 10% of normal. They’ll only be able to apply for the travel pass in four Russian cities.

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