On Finland’s eastern border, number of asylum applicants continues to rise

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				On Finland's eastern border, number of asylum applicants continues to rise

Signs at the border-crossing point in Vaalimaa, Virolahti, on 25 October 2023. The Finnish Border Guard reported that 74 asylum seekers crossed the border from Russia to Finland by 6pm on Wednesday. (Jussi Nukari – Lehtikuva)

THE NUMBER of asylum applicants has continued to creep up at border-crossing points along the eastern border of Finland.

The Finnish Border Guard has reported that a total of 74 asylum applicants had crossed the border from Russia to Finland by 6pm on Wednesday, with traffic busy particularly at the border-crossing point in Vaalimaa.

The daily number of arrivals was 39 on Monday and 55 on Tuesday.

“It looks like the number is growing and will continue growing,” Jukka Lukkari, a deputy commander at the Southeast Finland Border Guard District, analysed for YLE on Wednesday.

STT on Wednesday wrote about an asylum seeker who said he was offered help getting to the border by police in Russia. The man stated to the news agency that he was transported by an army vehicle to a makeshift police station between the border and Vyborg, a town in western Russia. He then took a taxi to the border, as instructed at the police station, and crossed the border on a bicycle.

In recent days, an unusually high number of asylum seekers have arrived at the eastern border of Finland. The total number of arrivals this week, 147, accounts for more than half of the 234 asylum seekers that have arrived at the border since the last day of July, highlighted YLE.

“We’ve prepared for this. The Border Guard exists so that we can manage disruptions in border security. It seems that we’re faced with one right now,” commented Lukkari.

Helsingin Sanomat reported yesterday that the government intends to shut down border-crossing points to safeguard national security as soon as today. Information obtained by the daily newspaper from several independent to YLE on Tuesday that Finland can in some circumstances close its entire border, arguing that national sovereignty takes precedence over international obligations.

“The thing is that ultimately, in a situation where it’s necessary, Finland could shut down the entire border. No international treaty is a suicide pact,” she commented, referring to international treaties concerning the right to international protection.

Aleksi Teivainen – HT

Source: www.helsinkitimes.fi

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