Xinhua
08 Jun 2026, 16:45 GMT+10
HELSINKI, June 8 (Xinhua) -- The Lapland District Court in Rovaniemi on Monday handed down verdicts in Finland's largest human trafficking case, involving 78 Thai berry pickers.
The court sentenced Jukka Kristo, former chief executive officer of berry company Polarica Marjanhankinta, to two years and six months in prison on 78 counts of human trafficking. His Thai business partner, Kalyakorn "Durian" Phongphit, was sentenced to nine months in prison.
Both sentences are unconditional.
Kristo, Phongphit and Polarica Marjanhankinta Oy were ordered to jointly pay 500,000 euros (576,000 U.S. dollars) in compensation to the victims for financial losses and emotional suffering, Finnish public broadcaster Yle reported.
The court also imposed a corporate fine of 150,000 euros on Polarica Marjanhankinta Oy. In addition, Kristo was banned from conducting business activities for five years and ordered to forfeit his military rank, according to Yle.
Phongphit's sentence was reduced because the same court last autumn sentenced her to three years and six months in prison for 62 counts of aggravated human trafficking in a separate berry-picking case.
The verdict is not final. Kristo, Polarica Marjanhankinta Oy and the prosecutor have said they will appeal the ruling to the Court of Appeal, Yle reported.
The victims were Thai nationals recruited to pick wild berries in Finland during the 2022 harvest season. According to prosecutors, the pickers were misled about their expected earnings, living conditions and associated costs, and were subjected to conditions resembling forced labor.
The case has renewed scrutiny of Finland's seasonal berry-picking system. Following years of concern over the treatment of foreign berry pickers, legislative changes took effect in February 2025 requiring foreign wild berry pickers to enter Finland as seasonal workers under contractual employment relationships.
Finland has no statutory national minimum wage. Instead, minimum wages and other employment conditions are generally determined through sectoral collective agreements.
Get a daily dose of Thailand Herald news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Thailand Herald.
More InformationTAIPEI, Taiwan: Taiwan should use its defense money more wisely and learn from the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, especially...
BRUSSELS, Belgium: The European Commission is considering new legislation that could require companies in sensitive sectors to diversify...
SEOUL, South Korea: North Korea, on June 4, revealed a new facility for producing fuel used in nuclear weapons, with leader Kim Jong...
BEIJING/TAIPEI: China, on June 4, strongly criticized comments made by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio about the deadly crackdown...
TOKYO, Japan: Severe tropical storm Jangmi hit Japan on June 3, bringing strong winds and heavy rain that disrupted transport and businesses...
When a refrigerated freight train packed with fresh durians and mangosteens arrived at the Chinese rail station of Mohan after journeying...
TAIPEI, Taiwan: Taiwan should use its defense money more wisely and learn from the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, especially...
CAIRO, Egypt: Iran launched ballistic missiles and drones toward Bahrain and Kuwait early on June 6, Bahrain's government said, adding...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: The sudden collapse of Spirit Airlines has left thousands of pilots, flight attendants, and other employees...
PARIS, France: U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth used a speech marking the anniversary of the D-Day landings to urge European countries...
OSLO, Norway: Norway's Crown Princess Mette-Marit has been put on a waiting list for a lung transplant after her health got worse,...
TIRANA, Albania: Thousands of people in Tirana protested this week against a plan to build a luxury resort on a sensitive stretch of...
