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Greenpeace
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MARCH 7, 2005
9:41 AM
CONTACT: Greenpeace 
Gina Sanchez
Tel No: +31 6 2700 0064
Fax No: +3120 5148151
 
Greenpeace Join Forces With Sámi Reindeer Herders to Secure Their Forest Future
 
LAPLAND, FINDLAND -- March 7 -- Today in a joint operation with Sámi reindeer herders, Greenpeace campaigners started demarcating the boundaries of the last remaining reindeer forests of Arctic Lapland. This unprecedented activity by reindeer herders follows many years of 'talk and log' processes by the Finnish government and continued logging operations in the Sámi homeland. (1)

Demarcation signs in Finnish, Sámi and English languages were strapped to trees at the edge of threatened forests, critical for the protection of winter reindeer grazing areas and the tradition of Sami reindeer herding. The signs read 'Reindeer Forest - No logging. Reindeer Herding Act.'(2)

"Before, we used to have negotiations, but it had no significance. The logging went on anyway," said Kalevi Paadar, a Sámi reindeer herder from the Nellim herd group. "Once the decision is made on how much forest is to be felled, it is carried out-no matter how much we try to resist. ... Now they don't even notify us before they start logging. There seems to be no more room for negotiation."

A coalition of reindeer herding co-operatives from Inari are demanding that the government agree to a logging moratorium in important reindeer forest areas mapped by the herders while formal negotiations take place. (3) Sámi reindeer herding co-operatives have never been given the opportunity to participate in meaningful negotiations with the government about which forest areas are scheduled for logging.

Most of the vital grazing forest marked on the co-operatives' maps are slated for logging by Metsähallitus, the government's own logging company. Logging has continued in five out of six co-operatives that have published such maps. However, according to the Finnish Broadcasting Company, Metsähallitus has today announced that it will temporarily halt logging operations in the reindeer herders' area of the Nellim group.

"Today announcement by Metsähallitus to stop logging in Nellim comes after years and years of disrespect for Sámi reindeer herders' rights," said Phil Aikman, Greenpeace forest campaigner. "What remains to be seen is whether there is the political will to resolve this conflict, in all the reindeer herding co-operatives, once and for all"

On 2 March, Greenpeace established a Forest Rescue Station in one of the threatened reindeer forest areas to highlight the ongoing destruction by Metsähallitus, the Finnish government's logging company and those paper companies that continue to buy this destruction.

In a joint operation with Sámi reindeer herders, Greenpeace campaigners start demarcating the boundaries of the last remaining reindeer forests of Arctic Lapland.

In a joint operation with Sámi reindeer herders, Greenpeace campaigners start demarcating the boundaries of the last remaining reindeer forests of Arctic Lapland.

Notes to Editor:

1) This view is reflected in recent recommendations by the UN Committee on Human Rights which issue a statement in November 2004:
"....regrets that it has not received a clear answer concerning the rights of the Sámi as an indigenous people (Constitution, sect. 17, subsect. 3), in the light of article 1 of the Covenant. It reiterates its concern over the failure to settle the question of Sámi rights to land ownership and the various public and private uses of land that affect the Sámi 's traditional means of subsistence - in particular reindeer breeding - thus endangering their traditional culture and way of life, and hence their identity."
"The State party should, in conjunction with the Sámi people, swiftly take decisive action to arrive at an appropriate solution to the land dispute with due regard for the need to preserve the Sámi identity in accordance with article 27 of the Covenant. Meanwhile it is requested to refrain from any action that might adversely prejudice settlement of the issue of Sámi land rights. "

2) In Lapland, the State claims ownership of up to 90% of the Sámi traditional homeland, covering nearly 39,000 km2 of Finland. The Reindeer Herding Act (Section 2) proclaims that these defined areas "shall not be used in a manner that causes considerable damage to the reindeer herding."

3) On 16 January 2005, a coalition of Inari reindeer co-operatives sent a letter to the Minister of Agriculture and Forestry detailing preconditions for negotiations under the Metsähallitus Natural Resource Plan (NRP). A copy of the letter is available in English.

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