MOSCOW, December 10 (Sputnik) – Ukraine has started fencing its border with Russia, claiming such measure will prevent Russian military and paramilitary personnel from infiltrating the nation’s territory. According to the Ukrainian government’s estimates, ‘Project Wall’ will take roughly four years and $500 mln to complete, raising doubts of its potential efficiency, as it is quite expensive in terms of both money and time. Albeit drawing obvious comparisons to another famed wall in Europe, namely the Berlin Wall, Ukraine’s ‘Project Wall’ is more reminiscent of other controversial demarcation projects like the American-Mexican Border fence and the Belfast wall.
Ukraine’s plans of constructing a 2,295 km border fence for only $500 mln seem way too optimistic. Similar efforts, undertaken in different parts of world, have required a lot more resources. For instance, the 800-km ‘anti-terrorist fence’ in Israel has thus far cost $2 bn and is far from completion, as reported by Global Construction Review. According to 2007 independent estimates by the Congressional Research Office, the 1125-km US-Mexico Border Fence will take the US 25 years and $49 bln to construct, as quoted by Forbes. In different parts of the US-Mexican demarcation bulwark, one mile of construction costs between $1 mln and $3.8 mln, according to data by Global Security. Moreover, the fence has not yet proven efficient enough to fend off illegal aliens rushing into America.
Ukraine’s ‘Project Wall’, therefore, would probably far exceed the currently approved budget of $500 mln, if implemented. Kiev’s plan also provides additional measures of security, such as wide and deep ditches along the actual fence, control towers and electric systems, as well as other monitoring tools. Maintaining such a complicated structure would be another burden for the nation’s budget.
"The state border runs right through the streets and courtyards of private houses," wrote East Ukraine’s Denis Kazansky of Bloomberg Businessweek. "People there tell jokes about houses where the kitchen is in Ukraine and the toilet in Russia."
“They should have access to the documents and also it would be a good thing to invite foreign construction specialists to supervise and control the quality of the work,” Daria Kalenyuk of the Anticorruption Action Centre told the Kyiv Post.
Ukrainian military experts say such walls might be useful in fighting borderline crime, like in the US or Ulster, but would hardly come in handy in the warzone.
The actual shortcomings of the ‘Project Wall’ will become evident during the early stages of its construction as PM Yatseniuk seems adamant in his desire to put a wall between Ukraine and Russia.