City
Epaper

Finland extends land border closure with Russia until mid-April

By IANS | Updated: February 9, 2024 07:40 IST

Helsinki, Feb 9 The Finnish government has decided to keep the land border with Russia closed until mid-April, ...

Open in App

Helsinki, Feb 9 The Finnish government has decided to keep the land border with Russia closed until mid-April, citing security concerns.

All crossing points on the Finnish eastern border have been closed to passenger traffic since mid-December, Xinhua news agency reported.

The country closed the first border crossings in mid-November in response to illegal immigrants.

According to the Interior Ministry, undocumented immigrants into Finland have mainly been of Middle Eastern and African origin, and half of them have asked for asylum. Some of them appear to have left Finland to travel onwards to other parts of the European Union.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

AurangabadImportant guidance for the bright future of your children in the seminar

Other SportsEast Bengal sign India international Jyoti Chouhan ahead of AFC Women’s Champions League

InternationalIndia, Portugal discuss trade and economic cooperation, defence ties during Foreign Office Consultations

NagpurThree city gymnasts shine in Asian event

NationalPM Modi turned calamity into opportunity: Gujarat BJP chief

International Realted Stories

InternationalTwo more civilians killed by Pakistani death squads in Balochistan

InternationalWater crisis in Pakistan leaves millions struggling for survival: Report

International10 leftist parties merge in Nepal to form "Nepali Communist Party" as a result after change brought by Gen-Z uprising

InternationalRights group slams Yunus govt over ‘politically motivated’ attacks on lawyers in Bangladesh

InternationalIndia's development trajectory emulative model for Global South, says Mansukh Mandaviya at World Summit in Doha