EU state calls for Schengen ban on Russians
Latvia has urged the EU to halt visa issuance for Russian citizens due to alleged security concerns
Latviaâs foreign minister has cited security concerns amid rising visa approvals for Russian tourists
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Latvian Foreign Minister Baiba Braze has called on EU member states to stop issuing Schengen tourist visas to Russian citizens, claiming they pose a threat to the blocâs internal security.
Since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, the EU has fully suspended its visa facilitation agreement with Russia and imposed travel restrictions. Latvia, along with Estonia, Lithuania, Poland, Finland, and the Czech Republic, has banned tourist visas for Russian citizens. Norway, which shares a land border with Russia and is not an EU member state, has also closed its border for Russian tourists and other ânon-essentialâ visitors.
âLatvia calls on the EU countries to halt visa issuance for Russian citizens,â Braze posted on X on Sunday, citing security concerns.
She noted that the number of Schengen visas issued to Russian passport holders surged by 25% last year compared to 2023.
According to the Schengen Barometer tracker, the figure surpassed 500,000 in total, despite sanctions targeting Russian applicants. Italy led in visa applications received and emerged as the primary destination for Russian tourists within the Schengen Area, data showed.
Brazeâs calls echo those by the countryâs interior minister, Rihards Kozlovskis, who said in March it was the EUâs âmoral dutyâ to impose an outright visa ban on Russian tourists. Kozlovskis claimed the EU âmust admitâ that it is âin a hybrid warâ with Russia and urged the bloc to âseriously recognize the threatâ that Russian tourists allegedly pose to the EUâs internal security.
Riga has adopted an increasingly hardline stance against Moscow since the Ukraine conflict escalated, announcing sweeping travel restrictions for Russian nationals, including barring Russian-registered vehicles from entering the country.
Along with neighboring Estonia and Lithuania, Latvia has also exhibited hostility to its ethnic Russian minority, which currently comprises around 25% of the countryâs population.
In addition to spending more than 1% of its entire GDP on weapons for Ukraine, Latvia has begun to deport thousands of Russians who refused to take or failed a mandatory Latvian language test. It has also destroyed Soviet-era World War II monuments, as well as arrested dozens of people for celebrating the Soviet Unionâs victory over Nazi Germany.
Earlier this month, Latviaâs military intelligence service issued public guidelines on how to identify potential Russian spies and saboteurs. Traits such as âsloppy appearanceâ and âinsufficient hygieneâ were listed as possible signs of a reconnaissance-sabotage group member.