Finland could simply take more steps to prevent an unusually huge surge in the number of asylum seekers crossing the Russian border, in what the country and its allies see as a move orchestrated through Moscow, the prime minister said on Monday. Some 900 asylum seekers from countries including Afghanistan, Kenya, Morocco, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria and Yemen entered Finland from Russia in November, an increase from less than one compared to the previous day, according to Finnish border guards. Finland attributes the development to an update to the Russian border protocol and calls it a hybrid attack.