Privileged transit traffic

Privileged transit traffic or corridor traffic is traffic of one country across the territory of another country without usual customs and passport checks.[citation needed] The corresponding line of communication (usually a railway) is called the (privileged) traffic corridor and a train used in this kind of transit is called a corridor train (German: Korridorzug, Italian: Treno-corridoio). The reason for such arrangements is usually border changes or border creation which cut through an existing transport corridor.

Destination sign on a Transalpin EuroCity train

Examples

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Examples are listed with headlines for the country enjoying the transit privilege, not the country offering it.

Belgium

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  • The Vennbahn was a railway built in 1885, at the time fully in Germany. In 1919 some areas were transferred to Belgium. The railway did as a result cross the new border several times. To handle this, the railway embankment with tracks were also made Belgian territory if inside Germany, without having border controls at the road-rail crossings. The railway was dismantled in 2008, although the embankment still belongs to Belgium.[citation needed]
As a result six German exclaves surrounded by Belgian territory were created as well as one counter-enclave. Five enclaves remain today. The sixth enclave and the sole counter-enclave no longer exist.

Estonia

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  • The road from Värska to Ulitina in Estonia, the only road to the Ulitina area, goes through Russian territory for one kilometre (0.6 mi) of its length, an area called Saatse Boot. This road has no border control, but there is no connection to any other road in Russia. It is not permitted to stop or walk along the road. This area is a part of Russia but is also a de facto part of the Schengen area. This arrangement started in 1991 and remains to the present.[1]

Finland

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Norway

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Poland

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Russia and Kazakhstan

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In former Soviet Union, railways were built before the internal borders were made at present places, or not regarding them. Trains might go a stretch into another country and back. Some examples are:

Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the train has become privileged transit traffic again due to border closure by Lithuania, and now trains run non-stop through the territory of Lithuania. After the Russian invasion of Ukraine 2022, this traffic and any other border crossing trains between Lithuania and Russia or Belarus have stopped operating.

Slovenia

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  • The road to the Brda region of Slovenia, between Solkan and Podsabotin settlements, crosses Italian territory. That stretch is 1,600 m (5,200 ft) long and surrounded by fence (45°58′58″N 13°37′43″E / 45.98278°N 13.62861°E / 45.98278; 13.62861). Cars are not allowed to stop there and taking photos is not allowed either. The road was built in 1975, as part of the Treaty of Osimo agreements between Italy and Yugoslavia. The road remains surrounded by fence, even though both countries are now part of the Schengen Area.
  • The railway from Grobelno through Rogatec (both in Slovenia) to Krapina and Zabok (both in Croatia) crosses the border to Croatia for short stretches which is trafficked like being inside Slovenia, until it passes the border to Croatia properly with border control (eliminated in 2023 when Croatia joined the Schengen Area). The railway goes along the Sutla river, whose old course forms the border. The river was straightened somewhat during the railway construction when this was internal land in Yugoslavia.

Germany

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Büsingen am Hochrhein

Austria

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  • Trains between Salzburg and Kufstein operated (via Germany) as privileged transit until 1997 when the Schengen area removed passport checks at this border. Border checks were reintroduced for them in 2015-2016 because of the European migrant crisis.[7] The route has been called Deutsches Eck (German corner).
  • After World War II a 'corridor-train' service was established between Lienz and Innsbruck using the Puster Valley Railway (via Italy); this service lost importance after the Schengen Agreement was implemented and was discontinued after 2013.
  • From the end of the Second World War in 1945 to near the end of the Cold War in c. 1990, trains with locked doors (to prevent people from boarding or disembarking the train in then-Communist Hungary without permission) were allowed to go from Loipersbach-Schattendorf in northern Burgenland to Deutschkreutz in southern Burgenland via the Hungarian city of Sopron. The 44 minute train ride on a three-car diesel train crossed about 16 km of Hungarian territory up to five times a day traversing between Vienna and Deutschkreutz (previously Oberpullendorf).[8] Nowadays, after the fall of Communism in Hungary and the accession of Hungary to the European Union, trains from Vienna call at Sopron before continuing on to Deutschkreutz. Austrian fares apply for the whole line.

Czech Republic

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  • After World War II, in 1945, a 2.7 km (1.7 mi) section of the railway line Varnsdorf (CS) – Zittau (DE) – Liberec (CS) through Porajów became part of Poland, and international traffic was stopped. In 1951, the Czechoslovak Railways restored the Varnsdorf – Liberec connection based on an agreement with East Germany (GDR) and Poland; ČSD trains had no stop in Polish or German territory. In 1964, a new treatment was signed. From 1972, GDR and Czechoslovakia restored standard international transport on this line. After the expansion of the Schengen area, Varnsdorf – Liberec trains also stop in Germany, but traffic through the Polish section is still based on the transit agreement. The Polish side[clarification needed] gets a charge[clarification needed] from the Czech side but neglects the Polish section and refuses proposals of Czech or German participation in the maintenance.[9]

Switzerland

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The Eglisau–Neuhausen railway line

The Netherlands

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  • Provincial road N274 [nl] is a Dutch main road that runs from Roermond to Brunssum, crossing in and out of Germany for about 7 km through the German municipality Selfkant. The road was built in a time when some German municipalities (including Selfkant) were under Dutch control after World War II. Until 2002 the German section was maintained by the Dutch Rijkswaterstaat, the road had no level intersections, and it was not possible to leave or join the road from German territory. On February 25, 2002, the corridor was handed over to Germany, giving it the name Landesstraße 410 (L410). The road was further integrated into the German network, making it possible to leave to and join from German territory. In contrast to other German roads, freight trucks are allowed to drive here on Sundays and national holidays, while in the rest of Germany this is prohibited.

Air traffic

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Air traffic has in general a number of privileged transit traffic rights, making it suitable to reach enclaves or isolated countries, and for longer-distance flights.

Most but not all countries offer these privileges.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ References found in main article Saatse Boot
  2. ^ "Border checks of pleasure craft in the Saimaa Canal". raja.fi. The Finnish Border Guard. Retrieved 2023-06-23.
  3. ^ Poland and Romania: Convention of the Freedom of Transit by Rail from One Part of Polish Territory to Another (retrieved July 4, 2014)
  4. ^ "Kaliningrad, petite Russie en terre européenne" (in French). 2 November 2009. Negotiations between the two parties resulted in the implementation of measures to take into account the specificity of the enclave from 2002 onwards. These include ... Rail Transit Facilitation Document (FRTD) issued upon the purchase of a train ticket ... Since the entry of Poland and Lithuania into the Schengen area in December 2007, the issuance of free multiple visas has ceased.
  5. ^ "Lenin returns to Russia from exile", History Channel
  6. ^ "Staatsvertrag - Gemeinde Büsingen". www.buesingen.de.
  7. ^ ÖBB Fernverkehrszüge können wieder über Salzburg nach München und Innsbruck fahren
  8. ^ Gollan, David (8 February 1970). ""Through the Iron Curtain Aboard the Korridorzug"". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 February 2023.
  9. ^ Hrozí zastavení vlaků do Německa. Poláci se nemají k opravě trati, iDnes.cz, 15. 5. 2015
  10. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland. Verlag Schweers + Wall GmbH. 2009. pp. 110–111. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  11. ^ "SR 0.631.256.913.62" (PDF). Retrieved 2021-03-15.