The immigration authority Migri said it got 1,323 asylum
applications at the eastern border between August and December
last year, about 900 of those in November and more than 300 in
December.
Now 160 people are missing from reception centers, most with
unknown whereabouts, Migri's Director of the Asylum Unit, Antti
Lehtinen told Reuters.
Eighteen people have turned up in other European countries,
including the Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, Sweden, France,
Germany and Switzerland, to refile an asylum application.
"It's of course possible that of these 160 most of them have
continued to another country, but they haven't yet applied for
asylum in that country," Lehtinen said.
Every asylum seeker in Finland has their fingerprint taken to
the Eurodac-system, Europe's shared fingerprint database,
Lehtinen added.
Under EU rules, the EU country where a migrant first applies for
asylum is responsible for processing the application.
Earlier in January, Finland extended the closure of its border
with Russia until Feb. 11, saying it was likely that the inflow
of asylum seekers would restart if the border opened.
In response to the situation at the eastern border, Finnish
president Sauli Niinisto called last year for an EU-wide
solution to stop uncontrollable entry to Europe's passport-free
Schengen area.
On Thursday, a coast guard unit of the Finnish Border Guard said
it was investigating several cases of "assisting illegal
immigration" related to the eastern border, suspecting criminal
organizations of large-scale human smuggling.
"Smuggling activities have taken advantage of the border
security disruptions on the eastern border," the coast guard
said in a statement.
(Reporting by Greta Rosen Fondahn; editing by Anne Kauranen and
Sharon Singleton)
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