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<link>http://uk.oneworld.net/article/country/246/</link>
<language>en_GB_uk</language>
<title>OneWorld UK - Finland</title>
<description>Finland</description>
<item>
<title>Sign up for Peace in Gaza </title>
<link>http://uk.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/84811</link>
<description>Your chance to petition the UN to appoint Martti Ahtisaari to mediate for an end to the bloodshed.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Finns prefer five more days off annually to a 2% pay rise</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/80144</link>
<description>According to a new opinion survey, Finns would rather have five more days off annually than to receive a two per cent pay rise.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Valtajahti Arkadianmäellä</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/78637</link>
<description>Eduskuntavaalit on käyty ja uudet kansanedustajat ovat aloittaneet työnsä. Vaalikampanjoissa luvatut asiat olisi nyt lunastettava. Mutta miten? Kansanedustajien mukaan yksittäisen edustajan tärkein eduskunnassa vaikuttamisen paikka on valiokuntatyö.</description>
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<item>
<title>Immigrant votes</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/77250</link>
<description>Finlands parliamentary elections will be held on March 18. There are almost 200,000 people with foreign backgrounds living in Finland  but still not a single immigrant representative in the Parliament.</description>
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<item>
<title>UPM and its 300 forestry workers reached a decent agreement </title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/76844</link>
<description>In September 2006, the forest industry giant UPM, based in Finland, announced its plan to get rid of its remaining 300 forestry workers. They and their union, the Wood and Allied Workers' Union, rejected the plan arguing that it is bad for both the company and its forests, let alone the workers themselves.</description>
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<item>
<title>Rethinking Rubbish</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/76816</link>
<description>Once viewed as an expensive idea hatched by nutty environmentalists, recycling is now mainstream economic activity. But despite extensive recycling schemes, the average Finn produces about 500 kilos of waste every year and the planet still seems to be going down the tubes. So is the current emphasis on household recycling a case of too little, too late?</description>
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<item>
<title>Investigation of occupational safety crimes is wanting</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/76605</link>
<description>In 2003 Finnish police registered 910 work place accidents. But this figure is only a fraction of the number of work place accidents registered by Statistics Finland, which recorded up to over 100,000 work place accidents. A sixth of the 910 cases registered by police ended up at the discretion of prosecutors.</description>
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<item>
<title>Union representatives accuse animal activists of mental violence against fur auction employees</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/76477</link>
<description>Just before Christmas, at the Fur Centre in Vantaa, close to Helsinki, animal rights' activists targeted not only potential customers (which is fairly normal) but this time also Fur Centre employees. Activists photographed employees and their car number-plates or registration numbers. Employees were also verbally abused on their way into work.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>SAK: Agency hired labour should be provided with regular jobs by job agencies</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/76416</link>
<description>Finnish legislation does not offer much protection to agency hired labour. Moreover, the handful of agreements with regard to agency hired labour, which have been hammered out by labour market parties, often leave agency hired labour bereft of the benefits which are usually enjoyed by employees with regular jobs.</description>
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<item>
<title>SAKs Lyly maps options for future relations</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/76363</link>
<description>Efforts to develop cooperation between six industrial trade unions have advanced to a new phase. In mid- December the unions chose SAKs bargaining department head, Lauri Lyly, to examine the options for future relations between the six unions. The main alternatives lie between a full merger and closer cooperation.</description>
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<item>
<title>Electrical workers union mounts a blockade</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/76012</link>
<description>MSB, a company based in Gdansk in Northern Poland, is seriously in breech of labour legislation rules in regard to its work sites in Finland in what amounts to dumping working conditions. Polish electricians have been paid only 5 hours per hour, a third of the hourly rate laid down by the Finnish collective agreement.</description>
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<item>
<title>PAM's Selin: Service sector must see an annual increase in pay and priority over the industrial sec</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/76011</link>
<description>Ann Selin, president of the Service Union United, is not satisfied with the government's goal in narrowing the pay gap between women and men. In 2004, the average pay for women was 80 per cent of the average pay for men making the gap even wider than it was in 1999.</description>
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<item>
<title>EU Glosses over Rights Violations in Russia</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/article/view/143214/1/</link>
<description>Finnish human rights groups say that European Union leaders failed to raise human violations in Russia effectively enough at their meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin here last week.</description>
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<title>Gender-based pay gap hasn't narrowed in Finland</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/73397</link>
<description>Generally speaking, we can say that in Finland, no narrowing of the gap between women's and men's pay has taken place in a long time. The average wage and salary for women is still only about 80 per cent of that for men, despite numerous efforts, undertakings and agreements to tackle the gap problem.</description>
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<title>Finland: New legislation restricts abuse of foreign labour and expansion of grey economy</title>
<link>http://fi.oneworld.net/link/gotolink/addhit/71792</link>
<description>As of May 1 this year Finland will no longer restrict the free movement of labour from the new Member States of the EU.  
In Finland, the past two years of restricted entry rights have been put to good use by allowing time for control mechanisms against the grey economy and abuse of foreign labour to be put firmly in place.</description>
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