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How asylum seekers could help ease Finland's tech skills shortage
by Jon Henley

The Guardian    Translate This Article
7 June 2016

On 7 June 2016 The Guardian reported: Problem one: Finland's otherwise flourishing startup scene has a chronic shortage of developers. Problem two: the 32,000-plus asylum seekers who arrived in the Nordic country last year -- many young, highly educated, and computer literate -- face waiting for years before they land a job. 'Essentially, we just thought: there is a way to at least start addressing these issues,' said Niklas Lahti, the chief executive of Helsinki-based web services company Nord Software. 'We can teach refugees coding so they can become software engineers.' Global Good News service views this news as a sign of rising positivity in the fields of science and education, documenting the growth of life-supporting, evolutionary trends.

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Every day Global Good News documents the rise of a better quality of life dawning in the world and highlights the need for introducing Natural Law based—Total Knowledge based—programmes to bring the support of Nature to every individual, raise the quality of life of every society, and create a lasting state of world peace.



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