Estonia–Russia border
The Estonia–Russia border is the international border between Estonia and Russia. The border is 294 kilometres (183 mi) long. In its present form, it has not changed since 1945, when Estonia became part of the Soviet Union. A small change was to take place in 2014, but this has yet to take effect.[1]
History
Much of the border with Estonia is water, passing through the channel of the River Narva and Lake Peipsi, but in the south there is a land border, parts of which were disputed when Estonia joined the European Union and NATO. The agreement on the border between the two countries, recognizing that some territories are now in Russia, in the Pechory area of the Pskov Oblast and in the Leningrad Oblast, was signed in May 2005 and ratified by the Estonian parliament, but then Russia withdrew its signature from the treaty.[2] Russia and Estonia afterward signed a border treaty on February 17, 2014, making Estonia the last Baltic country to formalize its border with Russia.[3] As of January 2016, the treaty has not been ratified in either of the countries.[4]
The border towns of Narva (Estonia) and Ivangorod (Russia) are directly adjacent to each other. Both have a predominantly Russian-speaking population.
A border oddity was the road from Värska to Ulitina in Estonia, traditionally the only road to the Ulitina area, which goes through Russian territory for one kilometre of its length, an area called Saatse Boot. This road has no border control, but there is no connection to any other road in Russia. It is not permitted to stop or walk along the road. This border oddity will disappear after the 2014 agreement is implemented when the road will be in Estonia.[1]
Noteworthy is the sharp change in the direction of commerce before and after the establishment of the border. At the beginning of the 1990s, Russian consumers drove to Estonia to purchase goods, while it is now Estonian consumers who buy goods in Russia and often resell goods in Estonia. Top commodities include sugar, cigarettes and gasoline. On the border operates two types of checkpoints : auto- pedestrian on Friendship Bridge (Narva - Ivangorod) and the Lake Peipus (since 2004) that exports to Estonia sand for construction.
In August 2015 Estonia decided to build a fence along the border. It will be 110 kilometres (68 mi) long, and not be built at lakes or swamps.[5]
Border crossings
Crossing the border is allowed only at border controls. Most people need a visa on one or both sides of the border. Listed from north:[6]
- Road E20 / 1 / M11 between Narva and Ivangorod
- Tallinn–Narva–St. Petersburg railway, at Narva
- Local road in Narva
- Road 106 at Saatse
- Valga–Pechory railway, at Koidula, freight only
- Road 63 at Koidula
- Road E77 / 7 / A212 between Luhamaa and Pskov
Furthermore, the small Estonian road from Värska to Ulitina crosses the border into Russia and goes back to Estonia. There is no border control and it is not allowed to stop or go further into Russia this way.
See also
- Foreign relations of Russia#Territorial disputes
- Petseri County
- Treaty of Tartu Tartu Peace Treaty - (current boundary agreement in 1920 - reintroduction in 1991 after the Soviet occupation)
- The Bridge (Russian TV series)
References
- 1 2 "Estonia, Russia to exchange 128.6 hectares of land under border treaty". Postimees. 2013-05-28. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
- ↑ Россия отозвала подписи под договорами о границе с Эстонией
- ↑ "Russia Finally Signs Border Treaty With Estonia". Associated Press. 18 February 2014. Retrieved 19 February 2014.
- ↑ "Border treaty missing in Russian State Duma work schedule". ERR. 26 January 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2016.
- ↑ Estonia to build fence along Russian border (Yahoo news, 27 August 2015)
- ↑ Official Journal of the European Union, document 2014/C 420/09