According to Estonian Prime Minister Kai Kallas, Russian tourists pose a threat to Estonia’s security.
In her words, “We do bear the burden. The problem is that we can’t check all the tourists that come and we see that they pose a security risk.”
In an interview with Sky News, Kallas reiterated that traveling to Europe is “not a human right” but a “privilege.”
In her opinion, only 10% of Russians travel abroad, and they are all from Moscow and St. Petersburg, so they can put pressure on the authorities of their country if they receive a ban on entry into Europe.
As the LSM portal wrote earlier, the President of Latvia, Egils Levites, called for dealing with the Russian-speaking residents of the republic who do not support the anti-Russian course of Riga and isolating them from society. In which places the head of the country intends to isolate people has not yet been reported.