EU to discuss visa ban for Russians and training of Ukraine troops at Prague meetings

Several countries training Ukrainian troops to help them operate weapons delivered to Ukraine to help its fight against Russia’s invasion

Germany, some other member states and Mr Borrell are not in favour of an EU-wide ban on visas for Russian tourists. Photograph: John Thys/AFP/Getty Images
Germany, some other member states and Mr Borrell are not in favour of an EU-wide ban on visas for Russian tourists. Photograph: John Thys/AFP/Getty Images

European Union defence and foreign ministers, meeting in Prague this week, will discuss options for setting up a European Union military training mission for Ukrainian forces and also look into calls by some members to ban Russian tourists from entering the bloc.

Several European Union (EU) countries have been training Ukrainian troops for a while, mainly enabling them to operate weapons western nations are delivering to Ukraine to help its fight against Russia’s invasion.

It is not clear yet where an EU training programme could be based and what mandate it might have, EU diplomats said before the defence ministers’ meeting on Monday and Tuesday.

The bloc's foreign policy and security chief, Josep Borrell, has given few details of his plans so far, merely stating such a programme would not be based in Ukraine but in neighbouring countries.

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At a joint session with United Nations (UN) and North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato) representatives, defence ministers will also discuss the future of the EU’s suspended training mission in Mali and the UN peacekeeping force, Multidimensional Integrated Stabilisation Mission in Mali MINUSMA, as concerns are growing over an increasing Russian presence in the west African country.

The six-month-old war in Ukraine remains a foreign policy priority for the European Union and when the bloc's foreign ministers take over the meetings in Prague on Tuesday, a proposed visa ban for Russians will be at the top of their agenda.

The Czechs, who currently hold the EU's rotating presidency, are pushing for an EU-wide ban on visas for Russian tourists, an idea supported mainly by the Baltic countries.

However, Germany, some other member states and Mr Borrell reject such a move, arguing it might breach EU rules and cut off escape routes for Russian dissidents.

Lithuanian foreign minister Gabrielius Landsbergis has said Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Finland, which all share a border with Russia, may act on their own to block tourists if the EU does not agree on a union-wide ban.

Russians mostly enter the EU via the land borders of the five countries since direct flights between Russia and the bloc were suspended following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, said Mr Landsbergis.

In mid-August, Estonia closed its border to more than 50,000 Russians with previously issued visas, the first country in the EU to do so.

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy called on the West earlier this month to impose a blanket travel ban on Russians, drawing an angry rebuke from Moscow. — Reuters

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