News
The article is more than 15 years old

Finland Not Ratifying Indigenous Peoples Convention

Finland will not ratify the UN convention upholding the rights of its indigenous Sámi population in this government’s term, reports media group Alma Media. The EU has pressed Finland to ratify the document, as Finland and Sweden remain the only EU countries yet to do so.

saamelaisten lippu
Image: YLE Uutisgrafiikka

Minister of Justice Tuija Brax of the Greens said to an Alma Media newspaper that the Centre Party is to blame for the failure of the framework law, which has long been under at preparation at the Ministry of Justice.

Land ownership in Sámi territories is at the heart of the dispute. Under the terms of the framework law, the land currently belonging to the state would not be given over to Sámi ownership, but indigenous people's rights to the use of the lands would be significantly expanded.

The UN has criticised Finland for not ratifying the ILO 169 Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention. Of other countries with a significant Sámi population, Sweden and Russia have not ratified the document either, while Norway has done so.

On Thursday, the EU demanded of Finland and Sweden that they ratify the convention as soon as possible. The current legislative term in Finland ends in mid-March 2011.

Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb admitted that the situation is detrimental for Finland’s foreign policy.

Sources: YLE

Latest: paketissa on 10 artikkelia

The state alcohol retail monopoly is extending Saturday evening hours at about one-third of its stores, with roughly one in 10 opening on Sundays as well.

Defence Minister Antti Häkkänen (NCP) says that the new version of Saab's RBS 70 system will ensure protection of broader areas of Finland.

The deal means MTV's channels should re-appear automatically on Elisa's Viihde platform and TV cable offerings on Friday, without customers having to do anything themselves.