DUSHANBE, April 15, 2013, Asia-Plus – According to Russian media sources, Russia Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said on Sunday that Russia could introduce tighter passport regulations for citizens of former Soviet states crossing Russia’s borders already this year. 

Rogozin, who chairs Russia’s State Border Commission, said Russia could soon allow the citizens of the Commonwealth of Independent States to enter the country only if they produce a valid foreign passport.

“I think in the near future we need to stop the entry to Russia on the documents which are beyond identification,” Rogozin was quoted as saying by RIA Novosti .

In his state of the nation address in December, Russian President Vladimir Putin called for an end to the practice of allowing CIS citizens to enter the Russian territory with only their national (internal) passports by no later than 2015, in a bid to balance Russia''s need for more foreign workers with increasing public concern over illegal migration.

“We seek a definite liberalization in relations with the European Union and entering a non-visa space with Europe… But we will be never let into Europe if we allow ourselves to have such a regime on our own borders,” Rogozin told journalists.

Most former Soviet republics, including Russia, retain the internal passport, which in the USSR functioned as an ID card, and record of place of registration and other important information.

Under current agreements, Russia allows visa-free entrance to national passport holders from the CIS countries, including Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Tajikistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan. Putin offered concessions, however, for states that join the Customs Union, the recently-formed free-trade zone of Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia.

We will recall that the Russian Foreign Ministry''s Ambassador-at-Large, Anvar Azimov told the independent TV channel Dozhd on March 13 that citizens of Central Asian countries would be allowed to enter the Russian Federation only with passports for traveling abroad instead of internal passports after 2014.