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Sami people’s victory against forest-felling government company
Looduskalender introduces a new section “A World Looking for Solutions”. It will be devoted to global nature news, focusing on environmental protection and environmentally friendly solutions. The news that we bring to you tell about precedents that strive to change the sense of the present global environmental politics, and the actions and achievements of environmentalists.
The first story follows below.
Source: www.greenpeace.com
After seven years of Greenpeace pressure, government-owned logging company Metsähallitus has agreed to leave the tall trees of northern Lapland standing, and with them, the livelihood of the Sámi people.
The company, Metsähallitus, and the herders, have signed a logging moratorium for 20 years, protecting some of the last old-growth forests left in Europe and ending a long-standing conflict between the herders and Finland's State forest service.
Lapland forests home to Sámi people and herds of reindeer
The old-growth forests of Northern Lapland are home to the Sámi people and herds of reindeer. The Sámi people are among the largest indigenous groups living in northern Europe and are reindeer herders by tradition.
As such, they rely on the remaining old-growth forests to provide vital food for their reindeer during the long, cold winter months.For years, the Sámi reindeer herders had been calling on the government to protect important areas of reindeer forests from industrial logging. Yet the Finnish government prioritised other forms of land use. Piece by piece, the reindeer grazing grounds were reduced by the government's own logging company, Metsähallitus, which carries out most of the logging in Lapland.
Greenpeace joined struggle to save the forests in 2002
Logging destroys tree hanging lichen, an important source of winter food for the reindeer, and causes serious fragmentation of pastures. We joined their struggle in 2002 when along with the Finnish Association for Nature Conservation and the reindeer herders, we published maps of the most important reindeer forests in the area of Inari, and asked Metsähallitus to agree to moratoria on all logging in the forests and fair negotiations on their use.
Forest Rescue Station helped local herders
In 2005, we established an international Forest Rescue Station in the forests of Nellim. From the camp, our volunteers helped the local reindeer herders to mark out their reindeer forests, threatened by logging. In the same year, we also filed a lawsuit with the reindeer herders when Metsähallitus continued logging the forests despite a UN Human Rights Committee recommendation for Finland to cease the logging until the case has been handled by the court.
Agreement offers hope for other old-growth forests in Finnish Lapland
The agreement signed this week, gives hope for other old-growth forest areas in Finnish Lapland. Sini Harkki, Greenpeace forest campaigner in Finland, said that 20 years is enough time to find a permanent solution to the conflict between traditional reindeer herding and forestry. “We hope that the negotiated solution will work as a model for Metsähallitus to resolve similar conflicts in other parts of the Sámi Homeland as well.”
Kalevi Paadar.
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