Finland will once again close all checkpoints on its eastern border with Russia, Interior Minister Mari Rantanen (Finns) announced at a press conference on Thursday evening.
The re-closure of the Vaalimaa and Niirala checkpoints will be effective from 8pm on Friday 15 December, Rantanen said, and will remain in force until at least 14 January.
"Attempts to enter the country [by asylum seekers] began faster than expected when the Vaalimaa and Niirala border crossings were opened," Rantanen said, adding that the Finnish government aims to put an end to the phenomenon of undocumented migrants applying for asylum at the eastern border checkpoints.
"It is clear that the phenomenon of illegal immigration has occurred due to the influence of a foreign power, and it is also associated with crime. Finland decides on matters related to Finland," Rantanen stated.
The move is a reversal of the decision announced on Tuesday, when the government revealed that Vaalimaa, in the southeast of the country, and Niirala, further north, would re-open to cross-border traffic at midnight and 8am on Thursday respectively.
Vaalimaa and Niirala, along with six other checkpoints along the Finnish-Russian border, were closed last month as Finland responded to suspicions Russia was deliberately directing undocumented migrants to the Finnish side of the 1,300km-long frontier.
Border officials reported on Thursday that by around 6pm a total of 21 people had applied for asylum at the Vaalimaa checkpoint, while about 50 arrived at the Niirala station.
Speaking to reporters earlier in the day, Deputy PM Riikka Purra (Finns) indicated that the government was preparing to make changes to the decision announced on Tuesday.
"It seems to have happened exactly as we feared, that the pushing and encouraging of people to travel to the border and to apply for asylum started almost immediately," Purra noted.
When announcing the re-opening of the two border checkpoints at Tuesday's press conference, Prime Minister Petteri Orpo (NCP) said Finland would react quickly if Russia restarted its hybrid influencing tactics.
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