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    27 commenti

    1. whosudady on

      I saw thousands of them in Bali. Same with Phuket. They start bar fights with Australians.

    2. Nagash24 on

      Yes come here, give us your money, we need it to pay for ukrainian ammo.

    3. Equivalent-Rip-1029 on

      europe rise upon dictators’ money, whether they are Middle Eastern or Russian.

    4. Goose1235678 on

      Welp, I hope we at least use that money to supply Ukraine

    5. not_just_putin on

      Why wouldn’t they? It’s not like the EU is not letting them in.

    6. Lapkonium on

      Not surprising. They have more people earning six digits equivalent than most EU countries have total population – all these tourists gotta go somewhere, and Asia probably gets boring eventually.

    7. nunya2025 on

      Germany has so much blood on their hands! They’ve continued to fund the war with their dependence on Russian energy.

    8. Fast_Independence18 on

      Hopefully Ukrainians keep dropping bombs on their domes.

    9. Buckinfrance on

      Currently near Monaco which was a massive hangout location for them pre-war. It’s nowhere near what it used to be but I was surprised to see a Rolls Royce with RU plates recently and recently saw a yacht that probably is still owned by an oligarch, in the area. (It’s possible it’s been sold but there’s no record of that online.) Really wish the EU would keep these people out.

    10. -Focaccia on

      There are quite a lot of them (including “Kazakhs”) playing in Wimbledon.

    11. SwimmingPirate9070 on

      They are all over Thailand, like some sort of invasive bug

    12. SCARfaceRUSH on

      The naiveté of Westerners just has no bounds. Ukrainian Twitter [just yesterday was discussing](https://x.com/c10ned/status/1939982907872870469) this “inspiring young engineer from Russia” who just wants to “make fast RC planes”. Tech that’s totally unrelated to any modern military applications, like drones!

      * Gets cutting-edge tech from a Russian state-run enterprise that works for the MoD
      * Interned at Sukhoi
      * Attended an elite high school in Russia

      Literally an FSB plant to steal jet propulsion technology and everyone’s “in awe about his talent and ingenuity”. It’s not like USSR/ KGB/ Russia ever had history of corporate espionage and ever stole anything from the West. It’s not like other major adversaries, like China, ever done that. /s

      Even if we take the “rosy glasses” scenario – he doesn’t even have to know about it. The fact that he’s from Russia, people have access to him, and can have leverage over him is enough to exploit him and his work. He. Does. Not. Have. To. Be. In. On. It.

      Y’all don’t get it. They hate the West, the EU, etc. Just watch [the translated primetime TV coverage from someone like Julia Davis](https://www.youtube.com/@russianmediamonitor) to see what the moods are.

    13. BrigadierKirk on

      What’s the big issue with russian tourist being in Europe. Like obviously there the security concern but so long as that can be delt with there is no issues with having them here.

      I don’t see how putting sanctions on rich holiday goers has any affect on the war.

      Oh no russian citizens spending their money in the eu and not back home were that money can be taxed and spent back on the war…
      Oh no they bring there luxury boats here and spend sh*t loads of money here instead of back home?

      Like I don’t see how banning russian tourist helps ukriane.

    14. Penderbron on

      They love Russia so much, they don’t want to be there. They admire it from the distance.

    15. MrPopanz on

      I mean the poor russians probably can’t afford it, so it makes sense that mainly the wealthy are visiting.

      And good for us, means more money, which means more… ya know 😉

    16. FinalCisoidalSolutio on

      If you welcome wealthy Americans with open arms then you can welcome Russians

    17. Shadow__Account on

      So Putin invaded Ukraine and retards here want to take it out on Russian tourists?

    18. UnFelDeZeu on

      KICK THEM OUT. STOP GIVING THEM VISAS. WE ARE AT WAR FOR FUCK’S SAKE.

    19. >Wealthy Russian tourists are flocking back to Italy, France, and Spain — despite the Ukraine war and EU allies’ security fears. Italy issued 152,254 Schengen area visas at its two Russian consulates last year (according to EU Commission figures) – almost 19,000 more than in 2023. France issued 123,890 visas in 2024 (25,000 more) and Spain 111,537 (15,000 more). The Schengen travel zone covers 25 EU countries plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland. Russian trips to Europe almost halved after the EU froze a visa-free deal in 2022 due to Russia’s full invasion of Ukraine. But 2024 figures showed a clear rebound, with 552,630 new Schengen visas issued overall, some nine per cent more than in 2023. Greece (59,703 visas last year) and Hungary (23,382) also welcomed Russians with open arms

      >It costs about €1,000 to fly return from Moscow to Paris or Rome, usually via Turkey or the UAE, on top of visa fees and hotel costs. This is more than most Russians’ monthly salaries, making EU travel a luxury affair. Less well-off Russians went to Egypt and Turkey, or to (Russian-occupied) Crimea in Ukraine, Sochi on Russia’s Black Sea coast, and Russia’s Altai region instead.But what Russians called their ‘golden youth’ (fashion influencers, oligarchs’ kids, and pop stars) routinely posted flashy selfies on Instagram from trips to Paris and Courchevel in France, Sardinia in Italy, or Ibiza in Spain, despite the Ukraine war and Russia’s toxic anti-Western propaganda.The list included Ksenya Borodyna, Ida Galich, Dana Manasir, Nikita Mazepin, Olga Orlova, and Ksenya Sobchak, in a glimpse into the EU lifestyles of Russia’s party crowd. Regular Russian travellers also posted EU holiday videos on YouTube as souvenirs and status symbols. And while the EU Commission figures covered work and study visas as well as tourism, the bulk of the mass-scale visits were pleasure trips. “Russian tourists [who make it to the EU] will, on average, be wealthier than European tourists,” said Jamie Shea, a former senior Nato official. “European resorts like them [Russians] because they buy properties at exorbitant rates, stay in expensive hotels instead of Airbnbs, and spend money in boutique shops,” he said. “Russians don’t do picnics,” Shea said. France said it’s also good for Russia relations. “People-to-people relations and cultural ties can play a positive role in fostering mutual understanding and dialogue between populations,” the French EU and foreign affairs ministry told EUobserver in an emailed statement. “We work hard at maintaining a differentiation between the [Russian] regime responsible for the [Ukraine] war and the population, its civil society, and the opposition,” it said.”It is essential to maintain this window, to enable Russian society to get access to a plurality of reliable sources of information,” it added.And Emily Ferris, from the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), a defence think-tank in London, echoed the French view.”I’ve travelled widely in Russia and to tar an entire nation for the decisions of its leader is unfair,” she said. “Russians aren’t responsible for what their government does and they don’t make foreign policy decisions,” Ferris said.The Italian and Spanish foreign ministries didn’t reply to EUobserver.

      >But the numbers showed that French, Italian, Spanish, Greek, and Hungarian visa policy stood in diametric opposition to the approach of EU states which bordered Russia, or which had a record of recent Russian sabotage attacks. Russian tourism was “in no way justified in a situation where Russia continues the war in Ukraine and simultaneously intensifies hybrid activities against EU countries,” the Estonian foreign ministry told this website, for instance. Czech foreign minister Jan Lipavský also told EUobserver: “Russian intelligence services have a long history of exploiting uncontrolled travel flows, including tourism, as part of their tactics”. For its part, Russia-bordering Finland issued just 3,211 Schengen visas in Russia last year (some 7,500 fewer than in 2023). The three Baltic states issued 3,882 in total and Poland merely 251. Bulgaria issued 11,815 visas in 2024, but this was the steepest individual fall (by over 36,000) of any EU country, while the Czech Republic granted just 148.The Baltic states, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Finland, Germany, Poland, Romania, and Sweden all saw Russia-linked sabotage incidents in the past three years. And even Germany, which is home to the EU’s largest Russian diaspora, was pulling up the drawbridge. Germany issued 17,202 visas to Russians last year, compared to pre-Ukraine war and pre-Covid levels of almost 300,000.

      >The French authorities said they had security risks under control. “France takes security concerns very seriously, especially when it comes to Russian aggression against Ukraine and the risk of foreign interference in our country,” the French ministry said. “We issue visas on a case-by-case basis for individual tourists from Russia, depending on the situation of each applicant and in full compliance with European rules,” it said.France also backed Lipavský’s proposal to limit the Schengen travel freedoms of Russian diplomats accredited in EU capitals in order to stymie cross-border espionage, the French ministry added. “France supports the Czech proposal and has been supporting it for a long time,” it said.

      >But the Russian threat looked different from Paris or Rome than from Tallinn or Warsaw, said Shea, who now teaches war studies at Exeter University in the UK. “It’s less likely that Russian tourists going to more Russia-friendly countries like Spain, Italy, or Greece will be engaged in this kind of hybrid tourism warfare, which Russia tends to reserve for its more dedicated opponents, like the UK or the Baltic states,” he said. Even if Russia never hurt anyone in France or Italy, mass tourism posed other threats, warned Steven Blockmans, from the Centre for European Policy Studies (Ceps), a think-tank in Brussels. “Professional spies aside, some Russian citizens may be pressured or incentivised … to use their smartphones to map critical [EU] infrastructure, observe troop movements, or conduct other pre-operational surveillance,” he said.

    20. ConejoSarten on

      Are we allowing North Korean “turists” in?
      Russia should be the new North Korea

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