Lithuania accuses Belarus of 'blackmail' over stranded trucks

Lithuania accuses Belarus of 'blackmail' over stranded trucks

Lithuania has reopened its border with Belarus but thousands of trucks are still stuck on the other side, the foreign ministry in Vilnius said, accusing Minsk of "blackmail" over millions of euros in stranded goods.

Lithuania had shut its border with Belarus in late October after dozens of balloons loaded with illegal cigarettes entered its airspace, forcing the temporary closure of some of its airports.

The Lithuanian government and European Union denounced the incidents as a "hybrid attack".

But the border closure meant that thousands of trucks employed by Lithuania's logistics sector were trapped in Belarus for weeks, and inflamed tensions between the two countries.

Lithuania, a NATO and European Union member, reopened two of the border crossings on Thursday -- but, the ministry said in a statement late that same day, many of the trucks were still "being held hostage".

It accused the government in Minsk -- a close ally of Russia -- of "coercion and blackmail".

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Oleg Tarasov, vice president of Linava, the Lithuanian road carriers' association, told AFP one day after the border closed that an estimated 60 million euros ($69 million) in assets were stuck in Belarus.

Speaking to AFP on Friday, Tarasov told AFP that "the numbers (of seized trucks) haven't changed."

"There are around 4,500 lorries, including those stuck on the border and those that haven't been caught yet and are on the road," he added, stating that some have been "hidden away in private parking lots" to avoid being seized.

Lithuania had originally said it would close the border crossings until November 30.

But on Wednesday, Interior Minister Vladislav Kondratovic announced they would reopen earlier than expected, telling a cabinet meeting such restrictions were "no longer necessary to ensure internal security".

The airport in Vilnius imposed some temporary restrictions Friday after more suspected smugglers' balloons were launched from Belarus, disrupting operations for over an hour, according to the National Crisis Management Center.

The Lithuanian Ministry of Transport did not respond to AFP's request for comment on Friday.

Four other border crossings with Belarus were closed in 2023 and 2024 due to security concerns after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

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