Russia is illegally issuing new license plates in Ukraine

Violation of EU law
Russia is illegally issuing new license plates in Ukraine

A Russian license plate on a car. If it goes to Russia, all cars in the occupied areas of Ukraine should have such license plates in the future. (icon picture)

© Steinach / Imago Images

Russia is taking various steps to incorporate the occupied territories in Ukraine. Now the great power led by Vladimir Putin is issuing new license plates to Ukrainian vehicle owners – illegally. The EU faces a new challenge.

Russia uses a simplified procedure to grant Russian citizenship to Ukrainians, schools are taught according to Russian curricula, and referendums in the Russian-occupied territories are intended to pave the way for union with Russia. In order for the Kremlin to make the occupied areas its own in the future and to ensure that nothing is left of the Ukrainian state sovereignty there, the country is now also illegally issuing new license plates.

The European traffic police network “Roadpol” reports that private vehicle owners in occupied areas of Ukraine are being given Russian license plates. Police Inspector Floris De Vogel of the Antwerp Police, who is considered an international expert on number plates and vehicle registrations, found this out.

The People’s Republic of Donetsk and Lugansk are affected, for example, and Russia has been carrying out the practices since August. Since the European Union (EU) does not recognize the Russian-occupied Ukrainian territories as Russian territory, these license plates are illegal and “do not constitute a legal means of registering vehicles in the EU,” De Vogel said.

The police inspector continues: “Because Russia issues these license plates for an area that is not internationally recognized as part of Russia but is still considered Ukrainian territory, these license plates are not internationally recognized for this region.” He draws attention to a new challenge for the police in EU countries: the license plates issued in the occupied territories look exactly like those issued in Russia. “This makes it difficult for European police forces to recognize and identify these special license plates on public roads in Europe.”

Russia: Numbers on license plates indicate the place of registration

If you take a closer look, you can identify the affected license plates by their numbers. Russian license plates are made up of several letters in Latin script and numbers. The last part stands for the region in which the vehicle is registered. For example, the numbers 77, 97, 99, 177, 197, 199 and 777 stand for Moscow, 78, 98 and 178 for St. Petersburg.

If the last digit of a Russian number plate is 184, this stands for the Cherson region, which has been occupied since February. The 185 in turn points to the occupied Zaporizhia region. In addition, the numbers 181, 188 and 194 have already been reserved for Ukrainian areas that the Kremlin wants to occupy in the future.

Sources: road pole, RNDwith material from the dpa

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