Friday May 03, 2024

Milder weather rises refugee influx risk from Russian border

Published : 20 Apr 2024, 01:44

Updated : 20 Apr 2024, 10:30

  DF Report
Prime Minister Orpo and President of European Commission Ursula von der Leyen in Lappeenranta and Imatra border crossing on Friday, April 19, 2024. Photo: Finnish government by Lauri Heikkinen.

Prime Minister Orpo on Friday said that there is a growing risk that Russia will encourage people to try to cross the border into Finland illegally with the arrival of spring and milder weather.

“The official border crossing points at the eastern border are now closed. With the arrival of spring and milder weather, there is a growing risk that Russia will encourage people to try to cross the border into Finland illegally between official crossing points,” said the Premier during a visit to Easter border together with President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen.

Orpo and von der Leyen visited the Imatra border crossing point to learn more about the situation at Finland’s eastern border, said an official press release.

From there, they headed to the Old Town Hall in Lappeenranta, where they continued the bilateral discussions they had started the day before on their flight from Brussels after the special European Council.

The main purpose of the visit was for Commission President von der Leyen to learn about Russia’s instrumentalisation of migration to Finland and the measures being taken to combat it.

Orpo and von der Leyen flew from Lappeenranta in a Border Guard helicopter to the Imatra border crossing point and the Pelkola Border Guard station, where a fence of about three kilometres built as part of a pilot project has now been taken into use.

Minister of the Interior Mari Rantanen and the Border Guard gave an overview of the situation at the border.

During the visit, Orpo told von der Leyen about the Government’s draft act on temporary measures to combat instrumentalised migration.

“I hope that in the future, we will have an EU-wide solution in place to protect Member States being targeted by instrumentalised migration,” said the Prime Minister.

Orpo stressed the importance of keeping all of Finland viable and inhabited, including from the perspective of security policy. He told von der Leyen about the situation in Eastern Finland and the additional challenges brought on by the lack of border traffic in Eastern Finland due to Russia’s instrumentalisation of migration to Finland.

“Keeping Eastern Finland inhabited is very important for Finland. It is essential for this to be taken into account in EU funding and in the programme for the next Commission. This was our main message to Commission President von der Leyen. Finland and other EU Member States that share a border with Russia also need the support of the Union to improve our border security. This is about safeguarding the external border of the EU as a whole,” Orpo said.

“Russia’s hybrid attacks are not just about Finland's security. This is about the security of the entire EU. This is why I was here today. To tell you that Europe stands by your side. For the security of the borders and to support the border regions,” von der Leyen wrote in a post in her social media platform X after the meeting.

They also discussed Finland’s objectives for the EU’s next strategic agenda and the security situation in Europe.