Poland has set up new entry restrictions in advance of joining the European Union
Published:
2 October 2003 y., Thursday
Poland has set up new entry restrictions in advance of joining the European Union. From now on, citizens of Ukraine, Belarus and Russia must all have visas. Keen not to be seen as a snubbing its former Eastern bloc comrades, Warsaw insists visas will be easy to get, but queues on the first day suggested otherwise.
In Poland's Bug River border sector, entries from Belarus and Ukraine fell to about 500 in the first 12 hours. It is a dramatic drop considering some 30,000 people crossed during the previous 24-hours.
Authorities have been preparing for around five years to protect Poland's 12,000-kilometre eastern border. The EU has spent some 85-million euros training and furnishing staff at 15 frontier posts with hi-tech security material.
Since the accord was signed in 1997, the EU says no expense has been spared creating a visa system to tighten up a border porous to drugs, immigrants and arms. Guards have been given night-vision devices, off-road vehicles and training to stop smugglers and criminals.
While Ukrainians can get in for free because of a bilateral deal with Warsaw, Poland has a reciprocal agreement with Belarus and Russia over single and multiple entry visas which cost between ten and 50 euros.
Some fear such prices will hurt thousands of traders and workers who have relied on easy access to their more prosperous neighbour since the Soviet Union fell. But many Ukrainians and Belarussians, who supplement meagre incomes by selling cigarettes, vodka and goods in Poland, say they will keep trading, but prices will rise.
Šaltinis:
euronews.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
A candle lit vigil for the victims of the bombing and shooting incident over the weekend.
more »
Jennifer Boriss, a Firefox dev, went to the mall seeking test subjects to help improve the browser.
more »
Researchers at North Carolina State University have created and eco-friendly super absorbent foam they say could revolutionise efforts to purify drinking water in developing countries and disaster-stricken areas.
more »
Protesting taxi drivers clash with riot police outside the transport ministry after government talks fail.
more »
Israeli student designs a low-cost solution for shoe addicts.
more »
Chinese basketball player Yao Ming announces his retirement from the NBA.
more »
Scientists in the UK have discovered the molecule that causes pain in sunburn and say further research could lead to treatments for other inflammatory conditions like arthritis and cystitis.
more »
A travelling puppet theatre charms Lithuanian children as the horse-drawn show brings stories alive on a pop-up stage.
more »
A Taiwanese textile company is using waste coffee grounds to make an environmentally friendly fabric that dries fast and controls odours.
more »
After six months living a carbon-lean life in a specially built house in Stockholm, the Lindell family has returned home to reflect on the lessons learned...
more »