Privileged transit traffic explained

Privileged transit traffic or corridor traffic is traffic of one country across the territory of another country without usual customs and passport checks. 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.

Examples

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

Belgium

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

Finland

Norway

Poland

Russia and Kazakhstan

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 border crossing trains between Lithuania and Russia or Belarus are not going.

Slovenia

Germany

Austria

Czech Republic

Switzerland

The Netherlands

Air traffic

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.

The right to fly over another country.

The right to make technical stops (such as refuelling) in another country without customs and passport check.

The right for passengers to change aircraft at airports, without going through passport control.Most but not all countries offer these privileges.

See also

Notes and References

  1. References found in main article Saatse Boot
  2. Web site: Border checks of pleasure craft in the Saimaa Canal . The Finnish Border Guard . raja.fi . 2023-06-23.
  3. http://www.worldlii.org/int/other/LNTSer/1931/236.pdf Poland and Romania: Convention of the Freedom of Transit by Rail from One Part of Polish Territory to Another
  4. Web site: Kaliningrad, petite Russie en terre européenne . . 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. . French .
  5. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/lenin-returns-to-russia-from-exile "Lenin returns to Russia from exile"
  6. Web site: Staatsvertrag - Gemeinde Büsingen . www.buesingen.de.
  7. https://www.ots.at/presseaussendung/OTS_20150914_OTS0019/oebb-fernverkehrszuege-koennen-wieder-ueber-salzburg-nach-muenchen-und-innsbruck-fahren ÖBB Fernverkehrszüge können wieder über Salzburg nach München und Innsbruck fahren
  8. News: Gollan . David . 8 February 1970 . "Through the Iron Curtain Aboard the Korridorzug" . The New York Times . 5 February 2023.
  9. http://liberec.idnes.cz/trat-do-nemecke-zitavy-je-v-ohrozeni-d7n-/liberec-zpravy.aspx?c=A150515_153801_liberec-zpravy_tm Hrozí zastavení vlaků do Německa. Poláci se nemají k opravě trati
  10. Book: Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland . 2009 . Verlag Schweers + Wall GmbH . 978-3-89494-139-0 . 110–111.
  11. Web site: SR 0.631.256.913.62 . 2021-03-15.