Photo:Vesa Toppari, Yle

Finnish gov pulls bill to ratify UN declaration on Indigenous peoples rights

The Juha Sipilä administration has withdrawn draft legislation from the Finnish Parliament that would strengthen Sámi rights.

The cabinet said on Thursday in a letter to the Parliament that it would withdraw a 2014 bill intended to ratify an international agreement on the rights of indigenous and tribal peoples.

Finland has debated the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples for roughly 30 years. Lawmakers have been looking at draft legislation to ratify the convention since 2014, but did not get around to debating it before the 2015 parliamentary elections.

Progress on the bill has stalled over the contentious issue of Sámi land rights.

On Thursday the government justified pulling the draft legislation by saying that it contains outdated provisions, for example, relating to the role of the forestry management agency Metsähallitus. Parliament’s Constitutional Law Committee has already provided a statement on the bill, so it will not be possible to incorporate possible changes before another general election due in April.

Working with Sámi Parliament

Once a new government takes office later this year, it will have to work with the Sámi Parliament to revise the previous legislative proposal.

So far, the Justice Ministry has negotiated the bill with the Sámi Parliament, which has also recommended deferring action on the proposal to a new administration on the grounds that a delay of a few more years will not mean any significant changes to Finland’s ratification of the convention.

The task of ratifying the UN declaration as well as a Nordic Sámi Convention and reforming the local Sámi Parliament will therefore fall to the incoming administration.

This story is posted in the Barents Observer as part of Eye on the Arctic, a collaborative partnership between public and private circumpolar media organizations.

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