| > an entry point for Russians in Europe. > we have opened an office to easier collaborate with sanctioned individuals As a Russian living in Belgrade I love how you see "being open to people from Russia" as a negative, and how you just instantly equate being russian with being under sanctions. I, and everyone I know of, left russia not because they're a weasel trying to help putin move his money in and out of Europe, I moved because I was afraid I'd be forced to go kill and be killed, and because I just didn't want to take part in any of it. And I chose Serbia because it's one of the rare few options that would welcome me without too much restrictions and that's not prohibitively expensive for me to live. |
Point 1 - I was discussing action of a corporation, not an individual. And that corporation has 1 (one) single office in the whole vast Europe, and it's in a country known to be a base of other similar trade arrangements. It is not an evidence, but it is a big hint based on more than a decade of other cases.
Point 2 - regarding "one of the rare few options", as far a I know not a single EU country has or had a complete ban on immigration of Russian citizens. A few minor tweaks were made, most of them recent, after already a decade of war, like restricting only some subset of visas or restricting asylum seekers etc. Czechia had some bigger restriction just in 2025 afaik. But in most of the EU countries Russian citizen can legally immigrate and work.