SHARE
COPY LINK

BORDER

France to extend internal EU border checks over security fears

France said Wednesday it has decided to extend border checks with countries in Europe's Schengen passport-free zone until the end of October because of the persistent threat of terrorism.

France to extend internal EU border checks over security fears
Photo: AFP

France introduced border controls after the Islamic State group attacks that killed 130 people in Paris on November 13, 2015 and has renewed them
every six months since then amid new attacks.

“Considering the number of recent and thwarted attacks, particularly the one in Trebes, that have hit French territory, the government has decided a
new extension,” the French interior ministry said.

Moroccan-born Frenchman Radouane Lakdim, during a rampage in Carcassonne and Trebes on March 23, killed four people before he was shot dead by police.

A European Commission spokesman confirmed “we received notification from France this week” to extend controls for six months beyond the April 30 expiry date.

Unlike temporary checks to curb migration in the Schengen zone, those linked to security do not require a formal green light from the Commission,
the 28-nation EU executive.

A total of 26 European countries, including 22 European Union member states, make up the Schengen zone where no passport is required when crossing borders.

In addition to France, Austria, Germany, Denmark, Sweden and non-EU Norway have also imposed border controls, but initially to curb uncontrolled
migration.

Those countries grappled with chaos as people fleeing war in Syria and other countries headed to wealthy northern EU countries after landing en masse in Greece in 2015.

However, migrant flows have declined sharply following EU cooperation deals with Turkey and Libya, the main gateways to Europe.

And the commission has since last year said it will no longer allow migration as a pretext to impose border checks because it says order has been
restored.

Those countries in November for the first time cited security concerns for renewing the checks even if they also warn of the need to control migration.

Permission for the five other countries to continue the checks expires on May 12 and most appear set to request a renewal.

In a letter to the European Commission, Austria's interior minister Herbert Kickl (FPÖ) asked for a six-month extension of controls on its borders with
Hungary and Slovenia.

Though illegal migrant arrivals have decreased, “the smugglers would see the loss of internal border checks as a false signal and intensify their
activities,” Kickl wrote, according to the Austrian press agency APA.

The commission said it has not yet received notification from Austria.

A diplomatic source said Poland, Hungary and Slovenia meanwhile have complained to EU member states that they are paying an economic price for the border checks, questioning the pretext of security.

BORDER

‘Sushi smugglers’: Why food deliveries in this Swiss-Italian border town are causing havoc

Authorities in a small Ticino town are at a loss on how to stop customers in Switzerland from ordering sushi from nearby restaurants in Italy.

'Sushi smugglers': Why food deliveries in this Swiss-Italian border town are causing havoc
This photo shows Swiss customers waiting at the border for sushi delivery from Italy. Photo by Commune di Monteggio

Good sushi is expensive in Ticino, but with borders closed, a trip to Italy for lunch is not really on the menu.

As a result, local residents order the dish online from the nearby Italian town of Ponte Tresa and have it delivered at the border.

While delivery drivers are not allowed to cross into Switzerland to make the delivery, they wait on the border to hand the orders over. 

The ensuing congestion at the border creates “a dangerous, unacceptable and intolerable situation” particularly on weekends, according to Piero Marchesi, mayor of Monteggio, a Swiss municipality located on the border.

In an interview with Ticino Online, Marchesi spoke of “rudeness, chaos of traffic, gatherings and illegal parking” as Swiss customers wait to pick up their orders from Italy. 

 

 

 

“We ask the cantonal and municipal police to coordinate with the border guards to find a solution. I can't go there to direct traffic”, he said.

The customs of Ponte Cremenaga, Fornasette and Ponte Tresa have become a meeting point for customers picking up their food orders from Italy.

In response to Marchesi’s complaints, the Federal Customs Administration (AFD) confirmed that “the border areas, for various reasons related to safety and traffic aspects, are not suitable to be used for exchange of goods”.

 

 

 

For his part, Norman Gobbi, president of the canton’s Council of State said that “there are several services that offer sushi in the Ticino area”.

Meanwhile, Ticino officials asked Bern to introduce border restrictions to limit non-essential traffic to and from Italy, a request that has not yet been answered by federal authorities.

READ MORE: Why are cross-border workers exempted from Switzerland’s new travel restrictions? 

SHOW COMMENTS