Finland’s indigenous Sámi score victory in fishing dispute

District Court Judge Esko Hohti at a hearing on Teno fishing held in Finland’s far north municipality of Utsjoki on 14 February 2019. (Vesa Toppari/Yle)
The District Court of Finnish Lapland has overturned all charges of illicit fishing against four Sámi men from Utsjoki, the country’s northernmost municipality. According to the court, the Sámi were practising their constitutionally-protected culture, which includes fishing in Vetsijoki and Utsjoki, two tributaries of the River Teno.

Known as the Tana across the border in Norway, the 361-kilometre River Teno supports the world’s biggest Atlantic salmon stock and is the most productive salmon river in both countries.

According to the court, restrictions added a few years ago to the Fishing Act also violate human rights treaties signed by Finland, which guarantee the Sámi people the right to practice their own traditional indigenous culture.

Salmon stocks sufficient

The court dismissed charges because the Fishing Act limits the Sámi people’s right to fish in their ‘home river,’ the Vetsijoki. According to the court, the accused were not guilty of any crime as they have the right to fish in the waterway.

It also ruled that the salmon spawning targets in the Vetsijoki had been met, implying that their fishing was sustainable.

The district court ordered the state of Finland to pay for the men’s legal expenses.

The court also dismissed charges against a Sámi man who caught salmon using a net during closed season in August. The body said that a statute restricting traditional net fishing of salmon in the Utsjoki river in August violates the Sámi’s right to practice their culture as specified in clause 17 of the constitution.

In the court’s view, the level of salmon stocks in the Utsjoki does not justify the August fishing restrictions. It declared that the statute violates not only the Finnish constitution but also international agreements ensuring indigenous rights.

In 2017, a group of Sámi activists occupied an island in the Teno to protest fishing restrictions.

In recent years, the Sámi have also been involved with disputes over gold mining and logging in their traditional lands.

Finland is home to an estimated 9,000-10,000 Sámi people, most of them living in the northerly Lapland region.

Related links from around the North:

Canada: Canada announces investments to tackle illegal fishing and discarded fishing gear, Radio Canada International

Finland: Sami group occupies island in northern Finland to protest fishing rules, Yle News

Russia: More protected lands on Nenets tundra in Arctic Russia, The Independent Barents Observer

Sweden: Legal battle over hunting and fishing in Sweden’s far north, Radio Sweden

United States: Alaskan Indigenous community group pushes for better fishing quotas, Alaska Public Media

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