HELSINKI— Porsches, Bentleys, and other
luxury cars with Russian license plates are filling up the parking garage at
Helsinki’s airport as
Finland becomes an important transit country for Russian
tourists flying to Europe.
اضافة اعلان
The EU shut its airspace to Russian planes after
Moscow invaded Ukraine, forcing anyone who wants to travel to Europe to drive
across the border or take a circuitous route using non-Western airlines.
Since Russia’s COVID-19 restrictions expired in
July, there has been a boom in Russian travelers and a rising backlash in
Europe against allowing in Russian tourists while the war continues.
A quick stroll through the carpark at the Helsinki
airport revealed dozens if not hundreds of high-end cars with Russian license
plates, including a new Mercedes-Benz S-class sedan and Porsche 911 Turbo S.
“It boggles me,” Finnish traveler Jussi Hirvonen
said after leaving the garage. “I wish they weren’t here before Ukraine’s
situation is solved.”
Finnish Foreign Minister
Pekka Haavisto told AFP
that the Nordic nation has become a “transit country” for Russian tourists.
“Helsinki airport is seeing a lot of Russian tourism
at the moment.”
Finland wants EU decision
Finland said last week it
would limit Russian tourist visas to 10 percent of current volumes as of
September 1 due to rising discontent over Russian tourism amid the war in
Ukraine.
But Russians continue to enter Finland with visas
issued by other
EU countries in the Schengen borderless travel area for their
journeys.
“They come here on Schengen visas issued by various
different countries and then continue further via Helsinki airport,” Haavisto
said.
According to a survey conducted by the Finnish
border guard in August, around two-thirds of Russians crossing Finland’s
eastern border do so with a Schengen visa issued by a country other than
Finland.
“Hungary, Spain, Italy, Austria, Greece and Spain
normally issue visas to Russians, and are generally among the top issuing
countries each year,” border guard official Mert Sasioglu told AFP.
Schengen rules do not allow Finland to close the
border to specific nationalities, Haavisto said. Such sanctions can only be
decided jointly by the EU.
“As Finland and the Baltic countries are planning to
restrict these visas, it would be good if all EU countries took similar
decisions,” Haavisto said.
This sentiment was shared by many Finns at the
airport.
“There should be an EU decision to close the
border,” said Finnish traveler Jussi Hirvonen.
Finland intends to raise the issue at the next
meeting of EU foreign affairs ministers in the
Czech Republic on August 30.
‘Everybody should travel’
After Russia lifted its
COVID travel restrictions on July 15, the number of Russian tourists heading to
Finland has surged.
While the numbers are still well below pre-COVID
levels, there were more than 230,000 border crossings in July — up from 125,000
in June.
For many Russian travelers, the idea of not being
able to travel to Europe is met with disappointment.
“Everybody should travel, because when you see how
other peaceful countries live then you become more peaceful too,” said Pavel
Alekhin, a 32-year-old Russian professional athlete on his way to a bike
festival in Basel.
Russian traveller Vadim wan der Berg said the
situation is “very difficult” for normal Russians, as many now lack the
opportunity to fly for work or studies.
“We’re all waiting for this to stop and want a
normal situation in the whole world, in our country and Ukraine too.”
Europe divided
The
European Commission
acknowledged last week that discussions were underway to see if a “coordinated
approach” on Russian visas could be reached.
Eastern EU countries Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland
stopped issuing new tourist visas to Russians shortly after the war started.
Estonia has gone a step further and is looking at
stopping Russians who have visas delivered by other EU states.
But German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has expressed
reservations about such restrictions.
“This is not the Russian people’s war, it is Putin’s
war,” Scholz noted.
He said limiting tourist
visas would also penalize “all the people who flee Russia because they disagree
with the Russian regime”.