Lengthy article.
Ukraine has called on Canada and other countries refuse to issue visas to almost all Russians, but critics say that could hurt those looking for a way out of Vladimir Putin’s regime.
www.thestar.com
By
Allan Woods Aug. 27, 2022
''In some cases, the Russian travellers hold multi-year visas issued prior to the conflict in Ukraine. In other cases, they have tourist visas issued by countries that have continued to process Russian applications despite
the war.
However, the behaviour of some Russians while abroad risks wearing out the welcome for all of them.
“In some cases, they are quite aggressive, or aggressively expressing their sympathies and political ideas. It is an issue,” Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis told the Star.
“You can imagine how people feel in the Baltics when it comes to the letter Z (a symbol of support for the Russian military) or other symbols of Russian nationalism.”
Landsbergis said his government has not issued tourist visas to Russians since March. Next week, at an informal meeting of EU foreign ministers, he hopes to convince other European governments to follow suit.
He said that Russians come to Europe feeling “free and welcome to express and enjoy the liberties that the visa grants them, like freedom of speech.
“Well, I don’t believe that should be granted,” he said. “(Refusing visa applications) also sends a message to the Russian population that a certain period of self-reflection is needed. It’s not just going away, what their country is still involved in.”
Poland, Czech Republic, Finland and Denmark are among the European nations that have committed to restricting visa access for Russians. British Defence Secretary Ben Wallace told the BBC that the U.K. could “toughen up conditions” to avoid the prospect of “oligarchs’ wives enjoying themselves in Greece or the south of France, or on superyachts around the world while their army is committing war crimes in Ukraine.”
But the EU’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, said a total ban is the wrong way to go.
“More than 300,000 Russians have (fled) their country because they don’t want to live under the rule of Putin,” he said, according to
Politico. “Are we going to close the door to these Russians? I don’t think it’s a good idea.”