Finland bans Russians from buying property to protect national security
The government justifies the decision by saying that it is defending itself against possible espionage and sabotage of critical infrastructure.
CopenhagenThe Finnish Parliament has passed a law banning Russian citizens who are not residents of the Nordic country from purchasing any type of property or housing, claiming that this poses a risk to national security.
Since the start of the war in Ukraine and the country's U-turn upon joining NATO, the Finnish government has been sounding the alarm. of the dangers and suspicions that war actions are being carried out from Moscow hybrid against the Nordic country. Among these risks, the Helsinki government sees a danger of Russian citizens with connections to the Kremlin government, but also to organized crime, acquiring property near critical infrastructure for the country, such as power plants. The law, unanimous in Parliament, does not directly mention Russia. In practice, the ban will apply to those individuals or companies from outside the European Union that the government considers violate the territorial integrity, sovereignty, and independence of another state, or that pose a risk to Finland's infrastructure and national security. Finland fears espionage.
Russian citizens have been able to purchase all kinds of properties and homes in Finland for years, but since 2020, the Ministry of Defense has increased security controls for these transactions. The reason is that the Finnish secret services warned of the danger they posed, as the properties could be used for purposes beyond civilian use and could be used for espionage, sabotage, or in a hypothetical ground invasion.
Minister Häkkänen explained that over the past five years, more than 3,500 properties across the country linked to Russian owners have been monitored. According to Finnish media reports, some of these properties raised suspicions because they were summer houses equipped with large helipads or forest cabins unusually fortified with military equipment. Examples have also been found, such as the purchase by Russian investors of dilapidated hotels or empty logistics warehouses that have been inactive for years, but close to the surveillance checkpoints that the Finnish police maintain on the border with Russia.
According to public television YLE, among the Russian citizens whose properties have been investigated in the Nordic country is the oligarch and arms manufacturer Igor Kesaev, who is also linked to the Russian secret services. Kesaev acquired the land of an entire island on a major waterway in the southeast of the country, near the border with Russia. In the same region, a few years ago the Russian state-owned company Gazprom attempted to buy the land adjacent to a Finnish army barracks. The media Iltalehti A year ago, the Ministry of Defense published an extensive investigation listing 38 plots of land owned by Russians that were located near military weapons depots, telecommunications stations, and key infrastructure for water and electricity distribution.
The Ministry of Defense reported that 11 real estate transactions involving Russian citizens were blocked in 2024 after being deemed a security risk. However, the government clarified that the vast majority of property purchase applications by Russian citizens were approved, although the number of applications has plummeted in recent years.
Pushbacks at the Border
The approval of this ban adds to broader measures currently being considered by the Finnish Parliament to protect its 1,340-kilometer eastern border. The government approved a controversial law that allows border guards to return asylum seekers coming from Russia.Parliament is now considering extending this measure indefinitely, despite criticism from human rights organizations.
Finnish authorities have accused Moscow of facilitating the arrival of migrants at the eastern border with the aim of "destabilizing" the situation, after a sharp increase in asylum applications was recorded there in the fall of 2023.