Russians could face deportation from Latvia following Riga’s extraordinary amendments to legislation
Moscow has condemned as “lawlessness” the recent toughening of residency-permit application procedures for Russian citizens in Latvia, and has warned of a tough response. The new rules violate international legal norms, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has said.
Riga adopted immigration amendments in June extending the language test requirement to those Russian citizens who had previously been exempt from it. Russians applying for residency in the Baltic country are also reportedly obliged to disclose their views on the Ukraine conflict.
“The discriminatory requirements of Latvia’s migration laws are openly Russophobic in nature. They flagrantly violate fundamental international legal norms,” Zakharova said on her Telegram channel on Thursday.
Three Russian citizens were reportedly deported from Latvia in recent days for failing to provide the proof of language command necessary for obtaining permanent residence permits. Six more Russians are said to have been issued deportation orders.
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Roughly 1,500 Russian citizens have left the country of their own free will after their residency permits expired.
Moscow “will continue to take tough measures, including asymmetric measures, in response to the lawlessness going on in Latvia,” Zakharova warned.