Sign at Norway-Russia border: ‘No peeing towards Russia’
By The Barents Observer
“No peeing towards Russia.”
A
new sign has been set up at one of the most frequently visited spots along the
Norwegian-Russian border where visitors stop to take selfies. A Russian border
pole is clearly visible on the opposite side of the creek.
The
“No peeing towards Russia” sign on the road toward the village of Grense
Jakobselv is considered a preventive message.
The border line runs in the middle of a creek, and at low waters
the distance from the opposite river bank is only a few meters.
Norway’s
Border Commissioner Jens Høilund told The Barents Observer that he isn’t aware
of any “specific events in recent times” that prompted the sign's appearance.
He
said military border guards are often in this area to warn visitors before
“such attempts turn into an incident.”
“The police, the border guards and the border commissariat will
try to prevent incidents that could lead to violation of the agreement with
Russia, including insulting behavior,” Høilund said.
He
encouraged everyone who travels in the border areas to thoroughly familiarize
themselves with current regulations.
The border commissioner made it clear that incidents would be
reported to the police.
Located an hour drive northeast of Kirkenes, Grense Jakobselv
is a popular destination for both locals and tourists. The narrow road on the
Norwegian side of the border is at some places directly on the river bank. Signs along the road tell
visitors how to behave.
The “No peeing towards Russia” sign, however, is new.
Norway’s dedicated law on the border with its
eastern neighbor in the north is from 1950 and stipulates what citizens can and
cannot do in the near-border areas. In §3, the law reads that no “offensive
behavior along the border aimed at the neighboring state, or its authorities,
are allowed.” Violations of this law can be punished with fines or up to three
months in jail.
Asked about possible punishments for peeing, Høilund said that it
is up to police to decide.
“In such cases, the likely [punishment] is a fine starting at
3,000 kroner (290 euros).”
A few years ago, border guards detained four people in the
same area after they threw stones across the Russian border.
Last winter, a woman who put her left hand across the Russian
border was fined 8,000 kroner (772 euros). The incident, captured by
surveillance cameras, happened as she claimed the cairn at Treriksrøysa in the
Pasvik Valley where Norway, Russia and Finland meet.
Both Høilund and Finnmark police chief Ellen Katrine Hætta
said they are not aware of who put up the sign.
“However,” Høilund said, “it is set up in a place where tourists
often stop, often the first stop after a long drive. It is likely that some
have fallen for the temptation to urinate in the area.”
He
noted that the area is under video surveillance.
Norway’s 197.7 kilometer-land border with Russia is likely the
most peaceful of Russia’s external borders. Unchanged since it was agreed in
1826, the border is also a sign of peace; Norway is the only neighbor that
Russia has not been at war with.
https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2021/08/26/dont-pee-on-russia-it-will-cost-you-norway-says-a74904
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