Kuwait Times

Estonia workers flock home from Finland

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HELSINKI: When Finland locked its borders in March during the coronaviru­s crisis, tens of thousands of migrant workers from Estonia had an excruciati­ng choice to make: stay put, or go home to see family—and risk losing their jobs.

For father of two teenagers Rain Anni, the decision wasn’t easy but he opted to stay and make money, not knowing when he would see his family again. “Everyone I know made the same choice, that we’d stay here,” the constructi­on site foreman told AFP. For 15 years, Anni has been taking a two-hour ferry ride home every week to see his wife and kids, a break from his job in Finland, where thousands like him work—often earning more than they could back home, but with limited job security. But when Finland closed its borders on March 18, he wasn’t sure when—or if—he would be allowed back in.

“It’s always nicer to be together with my family but we had to make a decision,” Anni said. Before the crisis, an estimated 50,000 Estonian workers like Anni commuted regularly across the Baltic Sea to jobs in Finland, where average salaries are twice as high. Migrants from post-Soviet Estonia have become vital to Finland’s economy, especially in the constructi­on sector where

Estonian labor accounts for almost a quarter of the workforce.

Going back home to see friends and family is a lifeline for many, said Timo Ahola, head of constructi­on at the Finnish recruitmen­t agency Barona. He said that all of the 400 Estonian workers on his books have journeyed home since the lockdown was lifted on May 14.

“It’s had a huge impact on their wellbeing, that they can at last see their families,” Ahola told AFP.

Vulnerable position

For many Estonian constructi­on workers, the commute to Finland for work is an easy journey—but keeping a good job can be tough. “They often work in smaller companies or for agencies, so it often happens that they lose their jobs first,” Matti Harjuniemi, chair of Finland’s constructi­on trade union, told AFP.

Only about 15 percent of Estonian workers returned home once coronaviru­s lockdown started, a decision which was not always voluntary, Harjuniemi said.

Demolition­ist Marek Resev, who has commuted to Finland for almost two years, spent the two months of lockdown at home in Jarva-Jaani, central Estonia, after being laid off in March. “I got a lot done at home, mowed the lawn and spent lots of time with my partner,” he told AFP.

“But I’ve been worrying about money the whole time.”

Since the border was reopened, Resev has found work again in Finland, but says he fears the uncertaint­y of the coming months.

Limited relief

It was not just migrant workers hit by the border being shut down.Traffic on the commuter ferries that would normally shuffle the workers between Finland and Estonia dropped dramatical­ly.

Now passenger numbers are up to about 6,400 per day between their capitals, up from 1,200 during the lockdown, Commander Mikko Simola of the Finnish coastguard told AFP.

But it’s still a far cry from the 32,000 travellers that used to board the ships every day before the outbreak. The revival of commuter traffic has provided welcome, if limited, relief for Baltic ferry operators.

“It’s small but it’s something nonetheles­s,” Marika Nojd of Tallink Silja, one of the Baltic’s largest ferry operators, said.

“For the last few weeks we’ve only had lorries on board,” Nojd said, adding that they still only have a tenth of pre-virus passenger traffic. —AFP

 ??  ?? HELSINKI: Passengers arriving with the Tallink Megastar ferry (unseen) from Tallin, Estonia, at West Harbour terminal in Helsinki, Finland. At Helsinki harbor, stewards direct a long line of cars and vans with Estonian number plates onto the Tallink Megastar ferry, now that a change in lockdown rules allows thousands of cross-border workers stuck in Finland to finally return home. —AFP
HELSINKI: Passengers arriving with the Tallink Megastar ferry (unseen) from Tallin, Estonia, at West Harbour terminal in Helsinki, Finland. At Helsinki harbor, stewards direct a long line of cars and vans with Estonian number plates onto the Tallink Megastar ferry, now that a change in lockdown rules allows thousands of cross-border workers stuck in Finland to finally return home. —AFP

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