Russian official sounds alarm over lack of controls at Belarusian border

Published: 24 January 2007 y., Wednesday

Rusijos prezidentas Vladimiras Putinas
Russia's border control chief has sounded an alarm over the lack of controls at the Belarusian border, warning that members of terrorist groups and criminals could easily sneak into Russia from Belarus.

While speaking in the State Duma on Wednesday, Vladimir Pronichev, director of the Russian Border Control Service, noted that Georgian nationals were still allowed to enter Belarus visa-free although Russia had introduced the visa requirement for Georgians long before. As a result, he said, law-enforcement agencies thwarted “dozens attempts” by Georgian citizens to illegally cross the Belarusian border into Russia in 2006.

The Belarusian State Border Troops Committee was expected to comment on the remarks later in the day, BelaPAN reported.

The shared border issue was raised by Aleksandr Lukashenko last week, when he said that Belarusian border guard units would not be deployed at the Russian border this year.

“Despite the position that the Russian leadership has taken today, we will not introduce any border troops operations on the Belarusian-Russian border. We will not guard it,” he said at a meeting with Aleksandr Pavlovsky, the country's border control chief, on January 18.

General Pavlovsky noted that Russia was “one step away” from restoring full-scale border controls at the shared border, pointing to the operation on the border of 16 Russian customs clearance points for third-country goods.

He added that Russia had deployed on the Belarusian border 150 officers “acting in the interests of the Russian border troops.”

Šaltinis: www.naviny.by
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

N Korea reopens border with South

Relations between the two Koreas could be improving. Relations were becoming increasingly sour after Seoul stopped sending aid to their impoverished neighbour. more »

South Korea's Kim Dae-Jung dies

Former South Korean President Kim Dae-Jung has died at the age of 85. Doctors said he suffered complications following pneumonia. Kim devoted most of his life seeking the reunification of South and North Korea. more »

Russia dam accident, dozens missing

A fatal accident at the RusHydro-owned hydro-electric station in Siberia has forced its shutdown. more »

More than just a question of choice

One of the ways the EU promotes and supports democracy outside Europe is by observing elections abroad. more »

More rescued in Taiwan typhoon

More survivors are brought to safety in Taiwan following the destruction from Typhoon Morakot. Morakot hit Taiwan a week ago, killing up to 500 people, according to the latest estimation by the island's President Ma Ying-jeou. more »

Dozens die in Kuwait wedding fire

The burnt and blackened remains are all that are left of this wedding party near Kuwait city. more »

Mexico prison riot kills 19.

Nineteen people died and at least another 20 were injured during a prison riot in Durango state, in the country's north. more »

China gives industry 'green' light

As Beijing gets serious about tackling global warming; Southern China eyes opportunities to transform its highly polluting industries. more »

Elections in Afghanistan draw closer

The Afghan presidential elections are soon to take place and the election campaign is in full swing. more »

16 awarded US Medal of Freedom

President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama welcomed to the White House Wednesday 16 recipients of the Medal of Freedom. more »