Finnish Court annuls 2023 Sámi elections

The Sámi parliament of Finland is located in Inari. (Photo: Atle Staalesen)

The vote must be considered invalid because a significant number of individuals had been omitted from the election list, the Supreme Administrative Court of Finland decides.

According to the court, 72 people had been omitted from the election list and the mistake is likely to have affected the election result. The individuals did not get the opportunity to participate in the nomination process or to vote in the elections.

The elections to the Sámi Parliament of Finland were held in October 2023. The parliament is a legislative assembly that decides over key issues of importance for the indigenous people. There are similar assemblies in northern Norway and Sweden.

New elections will have to be held, the Court informs.

The decision was made after the Supreme Administrative Court had received more than one hundred complaints regarding the election list and election results in the Sámi district elections.

It is a serious situation, the leader of the assembly admits.

“We will study the decisions of the Supreme Administrative Court carefully. Until the new elections, it is important to ensure that the daily activities of the Sámi Assembly can continue as normal, chairperson of the Sámi Assembly Pirita Näkkäläjärvi says in a statement.

She underlines that the assembly plays an important role for supporting all three Sámi languages in Finland, Sámi culture and all Sámi traditional livelihoods.

According to the court, 72 people had been omitted from the election list and the mistake is likely to have affected the election result. The individuals did not get the opportunity to participate in the nomination process or to vote in the elections.

The elections to the Sámi Parliament of Finland were held in October 2023. The parliament is a legislative assembly that decides key issues of importance for the indigenous people. There are similar assemblies in northern Norway and Sweden.

New elections will have to be held, the Court informs.

The decision is made after the Supreme Administrative Court had received more than one hundred complaints regarding the election list and election results in the Sámi district elections.

It is a serious situation, the leader of the assembly admits.

“We will study the decisions of the Supreme Administrative Court carefully. Until the new elections, it is important to ensure that the daily activities of the Sámi Assembly can continue as normal, chairperson of the Sámi Assembly Pirita Näkkäläjärvi says in a statement.

She underlines that the assembly plays an important role in supporting all three Sámi languages in Finland, Sámi culture, and all Sámi traditional livelihoods.

“Children and young people need learning materials. Cultural associations and cultural workers need support. All Sámi traditional livelihoods need to be strengthened. This work must not be disturbed for any reason,” says Näkkäläjärvi.

According to the Supreme Administrative Court, the members and deputy members of the Sámi legislative body that were elected in the annulled elections will remain in their positions until a new election is held.

In the renewed elections, the election list confirmed by the Sámi Parliamentary Election Board in the spring of 2023 is to be used, taking into account the 72 persons that the Supreme Administrative Court has now ordered to be included in the list.

Related stories from around the North: 

Canada: “We still have a lot of healing to do with our fellow Canadians” – National Day for Truth and Reconciliation observed September 30, Eye on the Arctic

Arctic: Sami-led project seek to revitalize Indigenous across Arctic Europe, Eye on the Arctic

Finland: Finland prolongs Sami Truth and Reconciliation Commission through 2025, Eye on the Arctic

Greenland: Danish PM apologizes to Greenlanders taken to Denmark as children in 1950s, Eye on the Arctic

Norway: Can cross-border cooperation help decolonize Sami-language education, Eye on the Arctic

Sweden: New chairman appointed to Sweden’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Eye on the Arctic

United States: “This isn’t just about Native people, this is about America,” say truth commission advocates, Eye on the Arctic

Atle Staalesen, The Independent Barents Observer

For more news from the Barents region visit The Independent Barents Observer.

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