Last crossing point with Russia closed, sealing off entire border as tensions rise
Helsinki (AP):
NATO member Finland on Wednesday closed its last remaining border crossing with Russia after the government decided to seal the entire border with its eastern neighbour amid rising political tensions.
The Cabinet of Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo decided to temporarily close the entire 1,340-kilometre (830-mile) border between the two countries a day earlier over concerns that Moscow was using migrants to destabilise the Nordic country in an alleged act of “hybrid warfare”.
The Raja-Jooseppi crossing point in Finland’s Arctic Lapland region, located some 250 kilometres (155 miles) from the northern Russian city of Murmansk, closed at 2 p.m. Wednesday, according to the checkpoint’s normal November schedule.
Ville Ahtiainen, a deputy commander with the Finnish Border Guard in Lapland, told reporters that the remote border crossing, located in the middle of rugged wilderness, was quiet during the four hours it remained open Wednesday, with a handful of vehicles passing through on their way to and from Russia. The border cannot be crossed by foot.
No migrants attempted to enter Finland in Raja-Jooseppi on Wednesday, he said.
Finnish authorities say some 1,000 migrants without visas or valid documentation have arrived at the border since August, with more than 900 in November alone. Finland makes up a significant part of NATO’s northeastern flank and acts as the European Union’s external border in the north.
The migrants hail from countries including Afghanistan, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Iraq, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria and Yemen, and the vast majority of them have applied for asylum in Finland once they reached the Finnish side on the border, authorities said.
Finland accuses Russia of deliberately ushering migrants to the border zone that is normally heavily controlled by Russia’s Federal Security Service, or FSB, on the Russian side.
The formal closure of Finland’s entire eastern border with Russia takes effect at midnight Wednesday but, in practice, the Raja-Jooseppi crossing was the only point to remain open after the Finnish government closed seven other crossing points earlier this month.
The situation has escalated tensions between Helsinki and Moscow after decades of pragmatic friendly relations between the neighbouring countries. Those ties were broken by Finland’s decision in May 2022 to join NATO, a direct result of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine that started in February 2022.
Finland became NATO’s 31st member in April this year.
The Kremlin denies Russia is encouraging migrants to enter Finland and says it regrets the Finnish border closures. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said Finland on Wednesday formally notified Moscow that it has closed the last remaining northernmost border checkpoint. In a comment earlier this week, Zakharova charged that by closing the border Finland is hurting its own citizens.
Asked to comment on NATO allies allegedly planning to deploy troops at the Finnish-Russian border, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday in a conference call with reporters that “no one and nothing is threatening Finland,” calling the move “excessive”.
At the same time, he warned that “tensions may arise during the concentration of extra troops on our border”.