Russia needs your salary and social media account before allowing you visit
Migration just got tougher, seems like everyone now has to stay put in their country
Russia
has added a number of invasive new questions to its already prolonged visa
application forms and they include requirement details of an applicants’ social
media accounts.
As well
as any social media accounts, the embassy now asks for information about
parents, bank accounts and children, whether they are travelling or not. The
questions were introduced this week under a
“miscellaneous information” section
of the application, which already required details of every country visited in
the last 10 years. It costs between £38.40 and £45.60 to acquire a visa for
travel, raising concerns that Britons will be hindered from visiting.
The
online form asks applicants: “Do you have a social network account”, adding
that “if the answer is positive, you have to indicate information of up to five
social networks”.
It also
asks for the applicant’s monthly income and planned expenditure while in the
country, as well as details on any parents, living or deceased.
A
spokesperson for the Russian embassy in London said the new form was introduced
to “adopt the practices of our British counterparts when it comes to the whole
range of questions that visa applicants need to answer” – suggesting Russian
visitors must answer the same questions when visiting the UK.
“That
meets the current security requirements and... ensures equal rights of both
Russian and British nationals in preparing documents for obtaining UK and
Russian visa respectively,” the embassy added.
A
spokesperson for the Home Office was unable to confirm whether the UK asks the
same of Russian nationals wishing to visit the UK.
Tour
operators will be concerned that the additional requirements will further deter
travellers from visiting Russia. The Foreign Office, whose website makes no
reference to the new visa requirements, said there were around 150,000 visits
to Russia made by British nationals in 2015. However, figures from the Russian
visa service show that 87,863 visas were issued to Britons in 2015, a number
which fell dramatically in 2016 to 42,524.
Cox and
Kings runs a number of trips to Russia, including highlights of Moscow and St
Petersburg and a longer exploration of the country’s Golden Ring.
Katie
Cosstick, public relations manager at the tour operator, said Russia has been
their best-selling tour for the last few years.
“[The
visa application process] has always been very complex. When they announced [in
November 2014] that everyone would have to go to London or Edinburgh to have
their fingerprints take, we thought that would put people off but it didn’t
make any difference to our tour numbers,” she said.
“If
people want to go, they will go. It will just make them a bit wary of handing
over that sort of data.
“For
something like, how much you intend to spend - how will visitors know what is
the right answer? What are the authorities looking for?
The
Hermitage in St Petersburg is one of the world's largest museums Credit:
Gonzalo Azumendi/Gonzalo Azumendi
“Nobody
seems to have information. The Foreign Office hasn’t changed its advice. We’re
trying to get all the information together so we can advise our clients.”
Russia
will next year host the World Cup, a tournament likely to raise the profile of
some of the country’s tourism attractions, but also shine a spotlight on issues
of hooliganism and homophobia.
Telegraph
Travel included Russia in its list of 20 destinations to visit in 2017, in
honour of the centenary of the 1917 revolutions.
Last
month the US announced that consular officials are now allowed to ask for social media username
going back five years as well as request email address and phone numbers.
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