Belarus–European Union border crisis

The Belarus–European Union border crisis was a migrant crisis in 2021 consisting of an influx of coordinated groups of immigrants, mostly from the Middle East and North Africa, to Poland, Lithuania and Latvia via those countries' borders with Belarus. The crisis was artificially caused by Belarus in response to the severe deterioration in Belarus–European Union relations, following the 2020 Belarusian presidential election, the 2020–2021 Belarusian protests, the Ryanair Flight 4978 hijacking and subsequent sanctions on Belarus, as well as the attempted forced repatriation of Olympic sprinter Krystsina Tsimanouskaya from Tokyo, Japan.

Belarus–European Union border crisis
Map showing main routes of illegal migrants to the Belarus–EU border
Date7 July 2021 – late December 2021
Location
Belarus–EU border (Belarus; Poland, Lithuania, Latvia)
Caused by
Resulted inPoland–Belarus barrier
Lithuania-Belarus barrier
Parties

 Belarus


Supported by:
 Russia


Kurdish mafia (people smuggling)

 European Union

  •  Lithuania
  •  Latvia
  •  Poland (from 6 August 2021)
  •  Estonia (from 22 November 2021)

 United Kingdom (from 19 November 2021)


Supported by:

 Ukraine
 United States
 Canada
 Turkey
 Taiwan
 Japan
 South Korea
 Singapore
 Australia
 New Zealand
 Moldova
 Norway
 Iceland
 Greenland
 Liechtenstein
 San Marino
 Albania
 Kosovo
 North Macedonia
 Montenegro
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Georgia
 Israel
Lead figures

Alexander Lukashenko
Roman Golovchenko
Viktor Khrenin
Ivan Kubrakov
Sergei Aleinik

Former leaders

Vladimir Makei †

Units involved

State Border Committee
OSAM special unit
Ground Forces
Aerospace Forces
GRU

State actors:
State Border Guard
Police Force
Public Security
Armed Forces
Fire and Rescue Department
Riflemen's Union
State Border Guard
State Police
Armed Forces
Border Guard
Policja
Land Forces
Territorial Defence
Forest Guard
Defense Forces
Frontex
Royal Engineers

Humanitarian activists:
Sienos Grupė
Grupa Granica
Fundacja Ocalenie
Hope&Humanity
International volunteers

Number
Unknown

Poland:

  • 15,000 troops

Lithuania:

  • Unknown

Latvia:

  • Unknown

Estonia:

  • 150 engineering troops deployed to Poland

United Kingdom:

  • 155 engineering troops deployed to Poland

Frontex:

  • 100 officers, 30 patrol cars, 2 helicopters in Lithuania
Casualties and losses
Russian forces:
2 dead (not in action)
Polish forces:
2 dead (not in action)
1 defected
19+ injured
 Lithuania Ministry of the Interior:
1 dead (not in action)
about 50 migrants dead

On July 7, 2021, Belarus's dictator Alexander Lukashenko threatened to "flood" the EU with "drugs and migrants". Belarusian authorities and state-controlled travel agencies, together with some airlines operating in the Middle East, started advertising tours to Belarus and falsely promoting opportunities of easy entry into the European Union. Those who arrived in Belarus, most of whom were trying to reach Germany, were then given instructions about how and where to cross the EU's border, and what to tell the border guards on the other side of it. Migrants said that Belarus provided them with wire cutters and axes to cut through border barriers and enter the EU. However, those who did not manage to cross were often forced to stay on the border by Belarusian authorities, who were accused of assaulting migrants who failed to get across. Belarus has repeatedly refused entry to Polish convoys carrying humanitarian aid for migrants.

Poland, Lithuania, and Latvia have described the crisis as human trafficking and hybrid warfare waged by Belarus against the EU. The three countries declared a state of emergency and announced their intentions to build border walls. The EU sent supporting officers and patrol cars to Lithuania, and 12 EU governments stated their support for a physical barrier along the border. Lithuania completed the 502 km (312 mi) barrier in August 2022 and the modern surveillance equipment was installed by the end of the year.

Human Rights Watch accused Belarusian authorities of manufacturing the crisis and state-level mass exploitation of migrants, making Belarusian border guards responsible for violence, inhuman and degrading treatment and use of coercion against migrants. Other human rights organizations and academics voiced concerns over the use of migrant pushbacks by Lithuanian, Latvian and Polish border guards, the denial of the possibility to lodge an asylum claim, as well as inadequate food, water, and shelter for the migrants, the latter of which was a subject of a European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) order. Polish officials have additionally been criticised for not allowing journalists, doctors, and non-governmental organizations to the border. At the same time, human rights organisations have been criticized for downplaying the threat to the security of the countries under attack, unrealistic approach and offering no alternative but open borders.

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