A/HRC/33/42/Add.3
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,3 and the United
Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.4
10.
States’ expropriation of land traditionally used by the Sami people, be it for the
purpose of natural resource extraction or other development projects, constitutes a
limitation of their property rights. Relevant international standards, such as the the
International Labour Organization (ILO) Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention, 1989
(No. 169), establish that the State has a duty not only to consult with the affected Sami
community but to obtain its free, prior and informed consent. The duty to consult and the
requirement for consent apply not only to measures that will affect an already recognized
right or legal entitlement, but to any measures that may affect lands that are traditionally
owned or possessed under customary tenure, whether officially titled or not, of the Sami
people. Consultation and consent are not a single event, but should readily occur at all
stages of a project, from exploration to production to project closure. In addition to
consultation and consent, additional safeguards need to be in place in order to ensure that
the rights of the Sami people are adequately protected in the face of natural resource
investments. Such additional safeguards include prior impact assessments that focus
adequate attention on the full range of rights that may be affected, mitigation measures to
avoid or minimize the impact on those rights, fair and equitable benefit-sharing and
compensation for impacts.
IV. Cross-border Sami initiatives
A.
Nordic Sami convention
11.
An important cross-border initiative of the Sami people has been the effort to
develop a Nordic Sami convention in conjunction with the Governments of Norway,
Sweden and Finland with the aim of safeguarding and developing the Sami poeple’s
languages, culture, livelihoods and way of life with the least possible interference from the
imposition of borders by national authorities. In 2005, the expert group appointed to draft
the convention unanimously agreed on a draft text, which was presented to the Sami
parliaments and Nordic Governments the same year. The draft convention includes
provisions relating to self-determination, non-discrimination, Sami governance, including
the Sami parliaments and their relationship to the State, languages and culture, education,
and rights to lands, water and livelihoods. The draft convention also contains several
provisions related to its implementation, including the establishment of a complaints
mechanism.
12.
Following long and complicated negotiations between Governments and Sami
Parliaments on the modalities for continued negotiations, an agreement on the setting for
negotiations on the convention was reached in November 2010, and negotiations towards
adoption of the convention began in 2011 with the aim of completion by March 2016.
13.
A recurring subject of concern during the Special Rapporteur’s visit was the delay
from the Governments in finalizing the convention. While she appreciates that there are a
number of difficult questions on which to reach agreement, she hopes that the States
concerned will take advantage of the opportunity to put in place positive measures designed
3
4
See Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, general recommendation No. 23 (1997)
on the rights of indigenous peoples, para. 5; CCPR/C/SWE/CO/6, para. 20; CCPR/C/FIN/CO/6,
para. 16; and CCPR/C/SWE/CO/7, para. 39.
See the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, arts. 25-32.
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