Lithuania voted to curb influx of migrants from Belarus

Lithuania voted to curb influx of migrants from Belarus

Lithuania has detained some 1,700 people at its border with Belarus this year

VILNIUS, July 15 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Lithuania has voted in favour of strict new migration laws amid an influx of arrivals from Belarus.

Politicians backed the controversial legislation on Tuesday, allowing the mass detention of migrants and limiting their right to appeal.

It comes as hundreds of migrants have illegally crossed into Lithuania from Belarus in recent weeks.

Lithuania accuses Belarus of flying in foreign migrants who then head to the border, a claim Belarus denies.

More than 1,700 people have been detained at Lithuania’s border this year. The EU country has deployed troops and begun building a 550-km razor wire fence along the border with Belarus, which is not a member of the bloc.

Relations between the two countries worsened in 2020 after President Alexander Lukashenko won disputed elections and launched a violent crackdown on demonstrators.

Opposition figures including Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, who claimed victory in that election, fled to Lithuania shortly after the vote.

Introducing the bill in parliament, interior minister Agne Bilotaite said the migrants were “not real asylum seekers” but instead a “tool to use against Lithuania” by Lukashenko.

She also said it would “send a message to Iraqis and others that this is not a convenient route”.

The law bans migrants’ release from detention for six months after their arrival. It will allow a speedier process for deporting migrants, limits their ability to appeal, and even allows people to be deported during their appeal process.

Lithuania’s Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis said the migrants were “being sent on a compulsory basis as a weapon against us”.

But rights groups have criticised the law. Lithuanian Red Cross director Egle Samuchovaite said that the legislation was a “potential human rights violation”. — NNN-AGENCIES

administrator

Related Articles