Helsingin Sanomat's most popular article on Monday morning is a story about two American women's struggles to land jobs in Finland.
"You could say ten years of my life have gone down the shitter," 40-year-old Theresa, who has a Finnish Master's degree, told HS.
She later went into a different field through an apprenticeship but is now planning on returning to the US with her family.
Ashley meanwhile managed to find a job quickly after moving to Riihimäki from Helsinki, but not in her chosen field. She started her working life in Finland as a cleaner, but she eventually found work in healthcare.
Ashley's husband is Finnish-American and the couple thought moving to Finland would be a fun adventure. Ashley has since gained a Finnish nursing degree and had two kids in Finland.
"It's probably easier to find a job in healthcare compared to many other sectors. I've also been lucky in many ways," she said.
Ukraine getting less help from Finns
lltalehti carries some concerning news for Ukraine.
Donations to NGOs trying to help Ukraine in the face of Russian aggression have declined markedly after a peak in 2022, and some organisations are seeing just a fraction of the funds they collected soon after the full-scale invasion.
The Finnish Red Cross, for instance, collected some 39 million euros in 2022, but so far this year has just 1.5 million euros in donations from Finns.
Unicef, Finn Church Aid and Save the Children all suffered drops in the millions of euros.
One organisation that has bucked the trend is Your Finnish Friends, which was founded to "enable and ensure the continuation of support for Ukraine, to take care of the survival and operating conditions of the Finns helping on the ground, and to support people in returning from the war back to civilian life in Finland."
The association actively raises funds and has seen growth from 30,000 euros donated in 2022 to 370,000 euros in 2023 and 380,000 euros in 2024.
Finnish nightmares
Hufvudstadsbladet writes about a woman's difficulties with Aktia Bank since her father passed away. The bank won't release account funds because the daughter needs to prove that her father did not marry or have any children in Portugal, where he retired at age 68 and lived for six years.
The problem is that it's not possible to obtain a certificate from the Portuguese authorities confirming that the father has neither married nor had children there. Such a register simply doesn't exist.
"We have to find out who the beneficiaries of the estate are," Aktia told HBL, noting that other banks have the same practice.
Experts told the paper that inheritances get complicated if the deceased has lived abroad, particularly in the United States.
According to HBL, it's next to impossible to obtain documentation on "secret families" from the US. A lawyer told the paper of a case where the Finnish authorities eventually accepted the testimony of an American neighbour of the deceased, who swore under oath that he had neither seen nor heard of any other children during the time he knew the family.
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