Lithuania extends state of emergency at Belarus border
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[December 07, 2021]
VILNIUS (Reuters) - Lithuania's
parliament on Tuesday extended a state of emergency at the country's
border with Belarus and at camps hosting migrants who arrived from there
until Jan. 15.
EU member states accuse Belarus of encouraging illegal migrants from the
Middle East, Afghanistan and Africa to cross the border into the EU in
retaliation for sanctions imposed on Minsk over human rights abuses.
The state of emergency, in place since Nov. 9 when hundreds of migrants
set up camps along Belarus border with Poland, allows border guards to
use "mental coercion" and "proportional physical violence" to prevent
migrants from entering Lithuania.
Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte told parliament the numbers of migrants
trying to cross the border has now decreased.
The Lithuanian Interior Ministry said last week that about 10,000
illegal migrants were in Belarus. Until they are returned to their
countries of origin, there was a risk that they could be sent towards
Lithuania, it said.
Lithuania's declaration allows border guard to ban all travel to within
10 km (six miles) of the Belarus border. Mobile phones could be taken
away from migrants and public gatherings near the border and in the
camps could be forbidden.
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Razor wire is seen in front of a Belarusian border marking pole in
Druskininkai, Lithuania, November 4, 2021. REUTERS/Janis Laizans/Files
The government on Tuesday dropped its proposal to a declare state of
emergency at Lithuanian border with Poland, to stop smugglers
ferrying the migrants to Germany via Poland, after push back from
lawmakers who called the measure excessive.
(Reporting by Andrius Sytas in Vilnius; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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