Finland shuts all but one border crossing with Russia after 700 asylum seekers entered the country in ‘plot by Putin to weaponise mass migration’ after Helsinki joined NATO
- Finland last week shut half of its eight crossings to Russia after surge in migrants
Finland’s prime minister said today that the country will close all but its northernmost crossing point with Russia following a surge in migrants, which Helsinki claims Russia is intentionally pushing after it joined NATO.
Since the start of August, around 700 asylum seekers have entered Finland without a visa over its 1,300-kilometre (800-mile) border with Russia.
‘The government has today decided to close more border posts. Only Raja-Jooseppi station will remain open,’ Prime Minister Petteri Orpo told a press conference.
After seeing a surge in migrants seeking asylum on its eastern border in November, Finland last week shut half of its eight crossings to Russia.
‘Unfortunately, these measures have not been able to stop this phenomenon,’ Orpo said.
This handout photo released by Governor of Murmansk region Andrey Chibis’ telegram channel on Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2023, Migrants gather getting hot drink inside a tent near the border with Finland at the Salla checkpoint, one of the still open border checkpoints situated in the Kandalaksha district of the Murmansk region
Finnish Border Guards check the documents of the arriving migrants at the international border crossing at Salla, northern Finland, on November 22, 2023
Migrants are lined up in front of Finnish Border Guards at the international border crossing at Salla, northern Finland, November 22, 2023
The government said that ‘it is clear that foreign authorities and other actors have played a role in facilitating the entry of persons crossing the border into Finland.’
‘The situation also involves international crime,’ the government said in a statement.
The Finnish government has accused Russia of funnelling migrants to the crossings as payback for its decision to increase defence cooperation with NATO ally the United States, an assertion dismissed by Moscow.
The Kremlin said on Friday that Finland was making a ‘big mistake’ by closing down border crossings and that Helsinki’s move was destroying bilateral relations.
Finland’s NATO accession, spurred by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, was met with threats of counter-measures by Moscow.
In October, the Finnish border guard sounded the alarm about a change in Russia’s policy, as it began allowing migrants without proper documentation to cross the border.
‘This is a systematic and organised action by the Russian authorities,’ Orpo said on Monday.
Migrants look at the Finnish border guard’s dog at the international border crossing at Salla, northern Finland, on November 22, 2023
In this handout photo released by Governor of Murmansk region Andrey Chibis’ telegram channel on Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2023, migrants gather getting hot drinks inside a tent near the border with Finland at the Salla checkpoint, one of the still open border checkpoints situated in the Kandalaksha district of the Murmansk region
Border crossings will be closed starting Friday and will initially remain closed until December 23.
Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has rejected allegations that Russia is deliberately pushing migrants to the Finnish border.
‘Finnish authorities are beginning to make clumsy excuses, warming up Russophobic sentiments,’ she said in a statement.
READ MORE: Finland closes its doors to asylum seekers saying Vladimir Putin is deliberately sending them across border with Russia because it had joined NATO
Orpo called the ‘instrumentalisation of migration’ an attempt to ‘influence the internal situation and border security in Finland and the EU.’
Finland’s interior ministry said Wednesday that the influx of migrants from Russia ‘poses a serious threat to national security and public order.’
‘We do not accept this kind of action,’ Orpo said.
Orpo stated that the current legislation also permits the complete closure of the entire border, but as of now, the necessary conditions have not been met.
Polish President Andrzej Duda on Monday labelled Russia’s actions as a ‘hybrid attack’ and likened it to the situation at Poland’s eastern border with Belarus.
The EU has claimed Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko pushed tens of thousands of migrants across its border to Poland in retaliation for sanctions in 2021.
‘Finland can absolutely count on Polish political support on the one hand, but also on sharing our experiences,’ Duda said.
Finland’s relationship with its eastern neighbour soured following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – prompting Finland to accede to the US-led NATO alliance in April.
Moscow warned the Nordic country of ‘countermeasures’ after the move.
Anticipating that Moscow could use migrants as a means of political pressure, Finland modified its laws in July 2022 to streamline the construction of a robust barrier along its eastern border.
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends the extraordinary G-20 summit, via videoconference in Moscow, Russia, 22 November 2023
In February, Finland started the construction of a planned 200-kilometre fence.
The barrier will be three metres (10 feet) tall with barbed wire at the top, with particularly sensitive areas equipped with night vision cameras, lights and loudspeakers.
However, only three kilometres have been completed so far and most of the border remains as uninhabited wilderness secured by only light wooden fences.
The Finnish defence forces have been called in to aid in the construction of temporary barriers around some of the border crossing points.
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