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Keywords
Boreal forests
Day
Forests (campaign title)
Forests (topography)
Indigenous People
KWCI (GPI)
Nature
One person
Outdoors
Reindeer
Sami
Snow
Timber industry
Trees
Forest and Reindeer Documentation in Muonio
Hans Holma, Reindeer herder, Chairman of Mounio Sámi reindeer herding district.
The Muonio Sámi Village is located in the northernmost part of Sweden, bordering Finland. Their reindeer pastures cover 3,460 square kilometres in Pajala municipality with permits to keep up to 3,900 reindeer in winter.
Reindeer herding forms the basis of traditional economy for the Sámi and is an integral part of the Sámi identity. Traditional reindeer herding is dependent on expanses of old-growth forest, which provide shelter and the main source of food supply in the form of ground and hanging lichens.
Sweden’s largest forest company, state-owned Sveaskog, has repeatedly ignored Sámi rights and logged old growth forest in areas vital to reindeer husbandry around Muonio Sámi village. Sveaskog has recently stopped all prior consultation with the native community before conducting logging operations. Muonio Sámi community and Greenpeace demand that Sveaskog immediately halt all logging in the area until consultations are resumed with the Sámi community, in the format that is acceptable for the community.
Greenpeace also demands that the Swedish government amends Sveaskog's ownership directive to ensure that the company stops unsustainable logging practices, protects old-growth forest and fully respects the rights of the Indigenous Sámi peoples.
Unique identifier:
GP1SV27H
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
28/03/2021
Locations:
Europe
,
Nordic Countries
,
Sweden
Credit line:
© Rasmus Törnqvist / Greenpeace
Size:
7680px × 4320px 33MB
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
Forest and Reindeer Documentation in Muonio
The Muonio Sámi Village is located in the northmost part of Sweden, bordering Finland. Their reindeer pastures cover 3,460 square kilometres in Pajala municipality with permits to keep up to 3,900 reindeer in winter.
Reindeer herding forms the basis of traditional economy for the Sámi and is an integral part of the Sámi identity. Traditional reindeer herding is dependent on expanses of old-growth forest, which provide shelter and the main source of food supply in the form of ground and hanging lichens.
Sweden’s largest forest company, state-owned Sveaskog, has repeatedly ignored Sámi rights and logged old growth forest in areas vital to reindeer husbandry around Muonio Sámi village. Sveaskog has recently stopped all prior consultations with the native community before conducting logging operations. Muonio Sámi community and Greenpeace demand that Sveaskog immediately halt all logging in the area until consultations are resumed with the Sámi community, in the format that is acceptable for the community.
Greenpeace also demands that the Swedish government amends Sveaskog's ownership directive to ensure that the company stops unsustainable logging practices, protects old-growth forest and fully respects the rights of the Indigenous Sámi peoples.
Related Collections:
Forest and Reindeer Documentation in Muonio, Sweden (Photos & Video)
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