Finnish Immigration Concerns MUSLIM SETTLERS

FINLAND: “EXPERTS” WANT MUSLIM SETTLERS SEEKING ASYLUM TO BE PLACED INTO JOB MARKET QUICKLY…….

Of course the meme that Muslim unemployment leads to jihad has the consistency of helium.

They actually want these unvetted (even vetting doesn’t safeguard against the possibility that these are criminals or jihadis) muslims to mingle with the general public before they’ve been processed.

tard invasion

NOTE: The traditional (big government entitlement mindset) Left will explode once these people are seen getting largesse from the tax payer or even taking jobs from the already (and in most cases long term) unemployed. A recipe for disaster.

Jobs for asylum seekers

The newsstand tabloid Ilta-Sanomat Monday ran a front page feature on measures to get newly-arrived asylum seekers into the Finnish job market.

The paper reports that a number of experts have expressed concern that without jobs, people become alienated from society and this could be fertile ground for radicalization. It noted that this was one worry that Antti Pentikäinen, Executive Director of Finn Church Aid and a special advisor to Prime Minister Juha Sipilä, voiced in an interview with Helsingin Sanomat over the weekend.

A number of others are also arguing that work, and work soon, is crucial. Centre Party MP Antti Kurvinen has suggested that asylum seekers be paid for carrying out small chores for local municipalities and church parishes. Meanwhile, the latest edition of the publication of the Finnish Real Estate Management Federation suggested that asylum seekers could be offered yard work and jobs helping to look after children and the elderly.

Ilta-Sanomat quotes the Director of the Finnish Immigration Service’s Reception Unit, Jorma Kuuluvainen, as saying that there is no barrier to refugees doing volunteer work.

However, he also told the paper that asylum seekers can get work permits for real jobs only after being in the country for three months. In cases where they lack travel documents, that period is six months.

Even with a work permit, language requirements can mean that many do not qualify for jobs that may be on offer. At the moment there are more arrivals than can be easily given language instruction in a short period of time.

Kuuluvainen told Ilta-Sanomat that in his opinion language requirements could be eased, although not at the expense of endangering work safety.

“There are quite a lot of jobs where being competent to do the work is good enough and language skills are not so important,” Jorma Kuuluvainen stated.

YLE

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