Finland will withdraw consent for Russia to operate its Consulate General in the southwestern city of Turku as of Oct. 1, 2023.
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The decision was announced after a meeting on Wednesday between President Sauli Niinisto and the Ministerial Committee on Foreign and Security Policy. The Finnish Foreign Affairs Ministry has officially informed the Russian ambassador about this decision.
Niinisto and ministerial committee noted that Russia’s recent decision to close Finland’s Consulate General in St. Petersburg, also scheduled for Oct. 1, 2023, was an “asymmetric response” to Finland’s earlier announcement of expulsions.
The president and the committee members also addressed the status of Russia’s consulate in Mariehamn, located on the Aland Islands, and took note of the current state of preparations of a comprehensive legal analysis of Aland’s special status by the Foreign Affairs Ministry.
������Russia will observe how deeply NATO will develop the territory of Finland and Sweden! Lavrov, #Russia #Putin #kremlin #Lavrov #Moscow
Russia was struck by the speed with which Finland and Sweden abandoned their neutral status!
At a press conference, Russian Foreign… pic.twitter.com/CxqKLWLEb3
— ��World News 24 ������ (@DailyWorld24)
July 12, 2023
The analysis will specifically examine the status of Russia’s consulate in Mariehamn, among other relevant matters.
Finnish international law experts have cautioned against hasty decisions regarding the Russian consulate in Mariehamn, given its connection to the peace treaties Finland signed with the Soviet Union in 1940 and 1947.
The Russian consulate in Mariehamn was established in 1940 after the 1939-1940 war between Finland and the Soviet Union. Currently, besides its embassy in Helsinki, Russia maintains consulates in Turku and Mariehamn.