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Finland Will Close 4 Border Crossings With Russia to Stem Migrants

Finland said on Thursday that it was closing part of its border with Russia after a dramatic increase in migrant crossings that it blamed on Moscow, the latest sign of deteriorating relations between the neighbors since the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The announcement followed days of warnings from the authorities in Finland over an increase in crossings, which President Sauli Niinisto of Finland on Wednesday suggested was retaliation from Moscow for Finland’s decision to join NATO.

Prime Minister Petteri Orpo said at a news conference on Thursday that Finland was closing four crossings on its eastern border starting at midnight on Friday. The government wanted to “react strongly,” he said, to what it viewed as “organized activity” by Russia.

“Finland as an E.U. and NATO member is steadily one of the countries that condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,” he said. “Therefore we have been prepared for various action from Russia, nastiness, and this situation does not come to us as a surprise.”

He added: “We have acted decisively and promptly in order not to have the situation deteriorate.”

There was no immediate comment from the Russian authorities.

Finland, a country of some 5.6 million, shares an 830-mile-long border with Russian — and also a combative history. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine raised fears in Finland that it could be one of Moscow’s next targets. Its government cast aside decades of military nonalignment and quickly moved to join NATO, a step that Russia described as “clearly hostile.”

But even before the invasion of Ukraine, the issue of migrants was a sore point between Helsinki and Moscow. In late 2015 and early 2016, Finland experienced a surge of migrants seeking asylum crossing the Russian border, most of them from third countries. Then, too, Finnish officials saw the hand of Moscow.

“The impression that someone is organizing and regulating things on the Russian side is probably true,” Finland’s foreign minister, Timo Soini, told the country’s state broadcaster at the time. “It is quite obvious that activity like this is a managed effort.”

In recent days, Finland has again been sounding alarms about an increase in migrants at the border — relatively small numbers that it said were a significant change.

The Finnish Border Guard announced on Monday that it would no longer allow crossings by bicycle at three checkpoints over what it said was a “phenomenon of illegal entry” that saw people “without adequate travel documents” trying to enter.

“Apparently they got the bikes near the border,” Jukka Lukkari, the deputy commander of the southeast border guard, told Finland’s national broadcaster, Yle, on Tuesday. “They ride quite a short distance.”

The next day, Finland’s interior ministry warned that it was considering closing the crossings with Russia.

“The total number of asylum seekers at the eastern border is still relatively low, but the number has grown sharply in a short period of time,” it said in a statement on Wednesday, without providing numbers. The ministry attributed the increase to a “change” in Russia, saying that the authorities there had started allowing people to travel to Finland “without the proper documents.”

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