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So again some more information. I called the Greek consulate. They told me that for the travel France-> Russia, there's not problem, but for the travel Russia-> France, they were not sure. So from all the informations I am 95% sure that I would be able to enter Russia, but have no clue about entering Europe. Anyway, my flight will be in one month, I'll inform you if I pass or not.– sk245230Commented Jul 3, 2017 at 9:33
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1"No clue about entering Europe": as an EU citizen, you have a legal right to enter the EU. Your Greek ID is proof of your EU citizenship.– phoogCommented Jul 3, 2017 at 10:44
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1And if I were with you, I would still keep the expired Greek passport while travelling. It's an additional proof of your citizenship, though expired.– Max PayneCommented Jul 3, 2017 at 11:43
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1@sk245230 My God, you've been speaking to complete amateurs, who've made you concerned for absolutely no reason. With a Russian passport, you have the legal right to enter Russia, and with a Greek ID card (proof that you're an EU citizen) you have the legal right to enter France (an EU Country), full stop. It can take a bit longer at French border control, yes, because entering a Greek ID card's data takes about 15 seconds by Hand instead of just scanning it– CrazydreCommented Jul 3, 2017 at 13:05
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1@sk245230 And by the way, you shouldn't ask the Greek consulate about French requirements, since they have no say in it. French border Police, yes, but what the Greek consulate says means absolutely zero– CrazydreCommented Jul 3, 2017 at 13:05
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