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Oct 28, 2025

Finland Closes All Border Crossings With Russia Amid ‘Hybrid-Warfare’ Migrant Surge

Finland Closes All Border Crossings With Russia Amid ‘Hybrid-Warfare’ Migrant Surge
Finland’s government took the extraordinary step on 28 October 2025 of shutting every road crossing along its 1 340-kilometre eastern frontier with Russia for an initial six-week period, citing what it calls a state-sponsored “hybrid operation” designed to destabilise the Nordic country. Over the past ten days, several hundred third-country nationals—mainly from the Middle East and Africa—arrived at remote Finnish checkpoints without valid Schengen visas. Cabinet ministers say Russian border guards waved the groups through despite lacking proper travel documents.

Interior Minister Mari Rantanen told reporters that the sudden influx is “clearly organised” and resembles the Belarus–EU border crisis of 2021. Under the emergency measure, applications for asylum can only be lodged at Finnish airports and seaports; land entry is barred except for rail freight via Vainikkala. Helsinki will review the closure on 13 December but warned it could be prolonged if the security threat persists.

The shutdown has immediate mobility consequences for cross-border workers, haulage companies and Finnish firms with operations in northwest Russia. Logistics association SKAL estimates rerouting cargo through Baltic ports will add 24–36 hours to supply chains and raise costs by 15 %. Business travellers from the energy, forestry and mining sectors—many of whom relied on the now-closed Vartius and Nuijamaa crossings—must shift to air routes via St Petersburg–Helsinki flights or use the still-open rail freight corridor for essential equipment.

Employers should brief assignees that short-notice trips to Russian sites will require new travel plans and potentially Russian visas issued outside Finland. Companies hosting Russian partners in Finland must also prepare for delays because Schengen visa issuance at Finnish missions in Russia has been suspended since 2024. Immigration counsel recommend that third-country nationals holding Finnish residence permits carry their residence cards and employment contracts when flying back to Finland to avoid secondary inspection delays.

In the medium term, the closure is likely to accelerate EU discussions on tougher external-border legislation and may strengthen calls within Finland’s ruling coalition to make last year’s temporary “instrumentalised migration” law permanent, allowing rapid push-backs in similar scenarios. Multi-national employers should watch the parliamentary timetable: if the amendment is fast-tracked, compliance procedures for business-visitor support letters and accommodation guarantees may change as early as Q1 2026.
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