Border Controls Between Krasnodar and the Crimea

Border Controls Between Krasnodar and the Crimea - Unrecognizable male in casual clothes and wristwatch leaning on metal concert crowd control barrier while standing on street in city

Later this year I expect to visit Krasnodar as a part of a commission for my day job (assume August or September 2016). I would like to combine this visit with a brief holiday to see friends and relatives in Simferopol, and hopefully attend a football match there. On paper this is all one country.

My plan is to leave Krasnodar by car on the E115 and then to join the E97 near Anapa. And from there eventually arrive in Kavkaz where I can take the ferry to Kerch. This is one of the few ferry sites in the region that traces its origins to pre common-era antiquity and has great attraction to me for that reason. I have never taken this route before, so I am a first-time traveller and don't know what to expect.

Overall my objective is to minimize the time spent in various queues, either those waiting to board the ferry or those operated by the Border Service.

I am aware that there was (or is) a border control point on the E97 because the Crimea used to be a foreign country. After the Crimea was repatriated, the route is presumably all one country, but part of the thrill and excitement of Russia is you can expect anything and everything anywhere along the way.

Question: is this control point in the Krasnodar region still operating? I do not need visas or other travel documents, but have concerns about the waiting times.

Also, I am informed (albeit only by rumour) that the queue to take the ferry can stretch back as far as 5 miles, even at pre-dawn. Can this be substantiated? If so, is there a way that this wait can be avoided?

Finally, is the Border Service operating ad-hoc, secondary control points in and around Kersh (i.e., the Crimea side) that might further delay my arrival in Simferopol (including any local vigilante militia)?

There's a YouTube video made by a tourist (I assume American because of the accent) who followed this same route and filmed all of the locations mentioned in this question. It was made prior to the repatriation of the Crimea so does not have current details about the border check point. It's nauseating in some places and the audio is sadly incoherent most of the time, but it does include a great vista of the strait taken from the memorial and is worth seeing for that alone.



Best Answer

You can easily determine what your wait times and everything else on the site of the Kerch ferry (Russian).

Currently it lists wait time at 3 hours and you can see what the queue actually look like and guesstimate your own wait times on webcameras but as far as the border crossing is concerned: there aren't any.




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Is there a land bridge between Crimea and Russia?

Krymskiy most, IPA: [\u02c8kr\u0268msk\u02b2ij most]), also called Kerch Strait Bridge or Kerch Bridge, is a pair of parallel bridges, one road, one rail, spanning the Kerch Strait between the Taman Peninsula of Krasnodar Krai in mainland Russia and the Kerch Peninsula of Crimea, which is claimed by both Russia and Ukraine.

Who controls Crimea now?

In 2014, Russia annexed the peninsula and established two federal subjects there, the Republic of Crimea and the federal city of Sevastopol, but the territories are still internationally recognized as being part of Ukraine.

Does Ukraine border Russia?

Ukraine is bordered by Belarus to the north, Russia to the east, the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea to the south, Moldova and Romania to the southwest, and Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland to the west.

Who is the rightful owner of Crimea?

Ukrainian sovereignty over Crimea (1991\u20132014) With the collapse of the Soviet Union, Crimea became part of the newly independent Ukraine. A referendum in Crimea in January 1991 overwhelmingly voted for Crimea to be a sovereign Soviet Republic independent of Ukraine.



How Ukraine's Border Checkpoint With Occupied Crimea Functions




More answers regarding border Controls Between Krasnodar and the Crimea

Answer 2

Russia consider Crimea as own territory. So there isn't any border control between Krasnodar krai and Crimea. The checkpoint on the E97 you meant isn't a border control point now, but just a security checkpoint.

Answer 3

This can be useful for you View from webcams near port where cars get on ferry http://www.gosparom.ru/webcams/video.php You can view and evaluate queues by yourself.

And yes - Crimea and Russia are one country. You don't need visa or extra documents for visiting it from Krasnodar.

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