Baltic States – CIS, EU – Baltic States, Legislation, Lithuania, Russia, Transport

International Internet Magazine. Baltic States news & analytics Friday, 26.04.2024, 16:03

EPP calls for end to discriminatory checks of Lithuania on Russia's border

BC, Vilnius, 25.09.2013.Print version
Following sustained and discriminatory controls of Lithuanian lorries by Russian customs authorities, EPP Group members of the European Parliament's International Trade Committee have called for a thorough investigation and adequate response by the European Commission and other Member States, informs LETA/ELTA.

"We are very concerned about what appears to be arbitrary and clearly discriminatory controls of Lithuanian vehicles carrying EU goods. Russia must stop this practice immediately. Such discriminatory checks violate the commitments Russia undertook upon joining the World Trade Organisation, and have a direct detrimental effect on European exporters", the EPP Group's coordinator in the International Trade Committee, Daniel Caspary (CDU, Germany) and Lithuanian MEP Laima Andrikiene said.

 

Mr Caspary and Ms Andrikiene announced the EPP Group will table an oral question to the European Commission on what measures it intends to take to address the issue. "Despite having subscribed to globally accepted WTO trade rules last year, Russia has since then increased the use of trade as an instrument of aggressive foreign policy vis-ą-vis its post-Soviet neighbours and EU Member States. The latest actions by Russia constitute elements of economic war, directed at its neighbours and the whole European Union. The European Commission and the Member States must step up pressure on Russia to end such unlawful and provocative actions", the two MEPs said.

 

According to reports, Russian customs authorities are singling out Lithuanian trucks entering Russian territory and subjecting them to in-depth and time-consuming searches of the goods they carry, including forcing them to completely unload their cargo without a reasonable justification. Moreover Russia has lately imposed new restrictions for Lithuanian road carriers, requiring them to hire expensive police services to escort the cargo from the border to internal customs offices all the way in Moscow. Losses to Lithuanian road carriers in the past days have already been estimated to amount to 10 million EUR.

 

According to Linava, Lithuanian national association of road carriers, around 650 Lithuanian-registered transport companies with some 13,000 trucks carry goods to Russia.






Search site