A new frontier for a new era

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.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

BMW's Electric Scooter

BMW recently highlighted an electric scooter, currently still in the concept phase, targeted at green-leaning commuters. more »

Sunburn study could lead to new pain treatments

"I'm excited about where these findings could take us in terms of eventually developing a new type of analgesic for people who suffer from chronic pain." more »

Anonymous Hacker Network Exposed

The Anonymous hackers now have names, at least in Italy. A series of dawn searches this morning concluded investigations by IT police, led by Antonio Abruzzese, into coordinated computer attacks by the group over the past few months. more »

Flying car is allowed to drive along the streets

He world's first flying car has been authorized to use roads while flying in the air. more »

The Elliptical Machine Office Desk

This is the adjustable-height desk that pairs with a semi-recumbent elliptical trainer to let users exercise while on the job. more »

Treebot, the treeclimbing forest sentinel

Scientists at the Chinese University of Hong Kong have developed an autonomous, caterpillar-inspired robot, designed to climb trees and spot danger to forests via a built-in camera. more »

Flooding at Nebraska nuclear plant

Nuclear officials confident over safety levels of flooded nuclear power plant. more »

British teenaged hacker out on bail

A 19 year old computer hacker in London has been released on bail after being charged with attacking government websites. more »

Workers fly flag against austerity

Greek Communists rally at historical monument in Athens to protest new round of austerity measures more »

Tokyo to Paris in under three hours? – by 2050 says EADS

Imagine flying from Tokyo to Paris in less than two and a half hours, without having to burn tons of fossil fuel. One day it might be possible. The concept of zero-emissions, supersonic flight is being explored by European aircraft maker, EADS. more »