Several Finnish outlets including MTV have led with the news first reported by the Danish public broadcaster that the Chinese vessel suspected of involvement in damage to a telecom cable has a damaged anchor.
The Yi Peng 3 was observed to slow down in the vicinity of the site where two undersea cables were severed on Sunday and Monday.
One of the cables linked Finland with Germany, and the other connected Sweden and Lithuania.
DR went to film the Yi Peng 3, which is currently guarded by the Danish Navy in the Kattegat sea between Jutland and Sweden, and found that one of its anchors appeared to be damaged.
Experts reviewing the footage told DR that one of the "flukes" (the parts of the anchor designed to hook into the seabed) on the anchor appeared to be twisted.
Although it is not known when the anchor may have been damaged, experts told DR that it is "natural" to investigate whether the damage may have occurred through contact with undersea telecom cables.
Finland is planning to start repairs to the cable on Monday, weather conditions permitting.
Author declines invite
The Independence Day reception at the Presidential Palace is the highlight of Finland's social calendar, and one of the hottest tickets around.
The event offers society's great and good an opportunity to sip punch, dance and speak about what independence means to them, as the biggest television audience of the year watches.
So it is surprising when someone turns down an invitation. Helsingin Sanomat reports that author Magdalena Hai did just that, saying in an online video that she did not feel like celebrating at the palace right now.
"I have two reasons," said Hai. "One is that we have a far right party in government and I'm baffled by how many Finns think that's okay. That so many Finns have supported the far right and their racist politics."
Hai did not mention the party by name, but some have said the Finns Party is "far right" even though academic researchers in Finland have tended to use "radical right" instead. Emilia Palonen of the University of Helsinki has said that the party as a whole is not far right, but some figures within it do use tropes to try and fish for votes among far right sympathisers.
The main reason for Hai's decision, however, was parliament's backing for the Minister of Employment, Wille Rydman.
MPs backed Rydman by 92 votes to 76 in a confidence vote called after Helsingin Sanomat published allegations that Rydman had harassed young women.
Hai said that the minister's actions, and his behaviour in publicly criticising individuals and the media in general, made her reluctant to go and dance with the MPs that supported him.
Rydman had made police complaints about Helsingin Sanomat's reporting, but the case was dropped with no charges for the journalists involved.
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Hotel chain pushes back check-in
Iltalehti looks at the fuss generated when the Scandic hotel pushed back its check-in times from 3pm to 4pm.
The company says it is necessary to ensure rooms are cleaned for guests before they arrive, but that explanation was not enough for some customers commenting on social media.
"If you are for example going to the theatre in another town and wanting to eat before the show, you are not going to have an un-rushed check-in before your evening out," said one user under a Scandic ad on Facebook.
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