The newspaper Helsingin Sanomat added fuel to the fire by reporting a case where a job seeker was denied a post at the Foreign Ministry after it had surfaced that the person possessed both Russian and Finnish citizenship. The newspaper claimed to be in possession of a taped conversation, in which the applicant was denied specifically due to his dual citizenship. In the tape, a Foreign Ministry official admitted that the applicant would have received the job if it were not for his Russian citizenship. The conversation was reportedly taped by the applicant himself to protect his rights.
As the affair began to untangle, Kainuu Brigade was revealed to have denied people with dual citizenship from training to become drone pilots. Armed Forces representatives admitted to Yle that similar instructions may have been given to other brigades as well.
Finnish Defense Minister Jussi Niinistö denied this information and ventured that Yle had fallen victim of deliberate disinformation. Later, Niinistö went on to accuse the Finnish national broadcaster of damaging Finland's relations with Russia with false news. However, the very same Jussi Niinistö claimed in his blog earlier this week that there was a loophole in Finnish law, through which Finland could be swarmed by "little green men," implying Russian soldiers.
Finnish Security Police (Supo) joined the debate by supporting the restrictions and suggesting that dual citizens should be specifically considered in the fight against foreign surveillance.
"All Russian citizens, regardless of whether they have dual nationality or not, must help the Russian security authorities if asked to," Supo chief Antti Pelttari said, as quoted by Yle, suggesting further restrictions in order to avoid dual citizens accessing sensitive information.
According to Hanna Smith, expert of the Aleksanteri Institute Finnish Centre for Russian and Eastern European Studies, this debate will not deteriorate Finnish-Russian relations, suggesting that it is an international trend to see dual citizenship as a security risk.
However, Tanja Ljungqvist, who is a Finnish-Russian citizen living in Finland for 26 years, suggested to Yle that the current debate implied a risk of Finnish-Russians becoming "second-grade citizens."
At present, the Russian diaspora in Finland is estimated at around 60,000 people, of which around a third reportedly have dual citizenship.
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