Poland

Schengen expanded to airports

Travelers flying between the nine new Schengen countries and to the rest of the Schengen space countries do not have to show their passport from this Sunday.

Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, Malta and Slovenia have joined Schengen Space on last December, allowing them to stop border controls.

This measure had been extended to airports only on March 30th, when the semester flight schedule is updated.

Schengen space includes 22 countries within the European Union, plus Norway and Iceland, including 400 million inhabitants.

Traffic Jams caused by Extended Schengen Zone

Since December 21st 2007, Ukraine is a direct Schengen neighbor, via the Hungarian and Polish borders.

Some reporters from Deutsche Welle reported that improved control at the border caused huge lines of trucks formed many kilometers of queue where the waiting time exceeded sometime over thirty hours. This is partly due to the cancellation of controls inside the European Union country: trucks reached Ukrainian much faster and that caused a queue.

At least, the state of Hungary provided hot tea and portable toilets for the frozen drivers.

The end of the Iron Curtain

The last remnants of the Iron curtain are history. From now on Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia have joined the border less Schengen Space.

The preparation took two years, but now traveling overland from Tallinn to Lisbon without showing up a passport is a reality. 400 million Europeans can now travel by road, train or ship in the expanded zone.

In next march, the airports will also abolish passport controls.

Pages on this Web site will be updated soon.

Schengen zone expansion date set

The European Union's ten new members will join the the borderless Schengen zone in 2007, according to the Justice and Interior ministers from the European Union.

These members must use Schengen standards at customs and border points in order to join the other fifteen members (EU minus UK and Ireland, plus Norway and Iceland). Those who meet the criteria will be able to integrate into Schengen system in 2007. Land borders are scheduled to be opened in December 31, 2007 and sea and air borders checks will be lifted by the latest in March 2008. In mid-2007 the European Commission will evaluate if their borders are meeting the required standards.

Syndicate content