Mr.
Jarle Jonassen v. Norway, Communication
No. 942/2000,
U.N. Doc. CCPR/C/76/D/881/1999 (2002).
Decisions of the Human Rights Committee declaring communications
inadmissible under the Optional Protocol to the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights**
Communication No. 942/2000*
Submitted by: Mr. Jarle Jonassen and members of the Riast/Hylling reindeer herding district represented by Law firm Hjort DA by Attorney Erik Keiserud
Alleged victim: The authors
State party: Norway
Date of communication: 9 February 2000 (initial submission)
The Human Rights Committee, established under article 28 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
Meeting on 25 October 2002,
Adopts the following:
Decision on admissibility
1. The authors of the communication, are the herdsmen of the Riast/Hylling
reindeer herding district, Norwegian citizens, of Sami ethnic origin. They
claim to be victims of a violation by Norway (1) of article
27 in conjunction with article 2, article 26, and article 2 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (the Covenant). They are represented
by counsel.
The facts as submitted by the authors
2.1 The Samis are an indigenous people constituting an ethnic minority in Norway, and reindeer breeding is recognized as an essential part of Sami culture. This activity constitutes the main material precondition for settlement in Sami areas. In Norway there are six different reindeer herding areas. These areas are divided into smaller units called reindeer herding districts, in which one or several groups of Sami are entitled to let their herds graze.
2.2 The authors are Sami reindeer herdsmen. They belong to the reindeer district
of Riast/Hylling, an area which is traditionally used for reindeer grazing
grounds every year from March/April to December/January. The boundaries of
the Riast/Hylling reindeer herding district were determined by a Royal Decree
dated 10 July 1894, and covers approximately 1,900 square kilometres. For
winter herding, the authors use the Femund reindeer herding district, together
with the Essand reindeer herding district, the latter also being used for
summer herding. The Femund reindeer herding district is approximately 1,100
square kilometres. The Riast/Hylling and the Femund reindeer herding districts
have been used by the authors and their ancestors since the beginning of the
seventeenth century. The reindeer herding districts of Riast/Hylling, Essand
and Femund constitute, together with the boundary of Elgaa, the Soer-Troendelag/Hedmark
reindeer herding area. This is the southernmost of the Norwegian reindeer
herding areas.
2.3 At present, the authors possess 10 herds, amounting to a total of approximately
4,500 animals (winter stock before calving). Within the district of Riast/Hylling,
traditional Sami reindeer husbandry is the main livelihood and source of income
for approximately 45 people of Sami origin.
2.4 Pursuant to the Norwegian Reindeer Husbandry Act of 9 June 1978, the Sami
herdsmen are entitled to engage in reindeer husbandry within their designated
districts. However, following the decision of the Norwegian Supreme Court
on 18 November 1988, the "Korssjofjell Case", the Sami herdsmen
are only entitled to let their reindeers graze within the district if they
have acquired a right to use the specific area in question according to Norwegian
law. This implies that if the owner of the land in question claims that the
Sami herdsmen are not entitled to let their herd graze on their land, the
Sami herdsmen have to prove that they have acquired such rights according
to Norwegian law on the acquisition of rights by use since time immemorial.
According to a new rule adopted by the Parliament in 1996, the Sami's claim
shall prevail if the judge - after having evaluated all evidence before him
- is still in doubt.
2.5 The "Korssjofjell Case"concerned a large part of the Femund
reindeer herding district. The landowners claimed that the authors were not
entitled to let their herds graze in the western parts of the district, which
are suitable for winter herding. The Supreme Court decided that the authors
were not entitled to let their reindeer graze in this area. The area in question
covers approximately 119 square kilometres, and constitutes approximately
11 per cent of the district's total gross area (not including Lake Store Korssjo).
2.6 On 24 October 1997, the Supreme Court rendered its judgement in the "Aursunden
Case 1997", concerning reindeer grazing rights in the summer reindeer
herding district of Riast/Hylling. The landowners had claimed that the authors
were not entitled to reindeer grazing on the privately owned out farm fields
in the area. In the first instance, the Midtre Gauldal District Court, on
25 October 1994, had ruled against the authors. The authors appealed to the
Frostating Court of Appeal, which dismissed the appeal on 15 December 1995.
The authors then appealed the case to the Supreme Court, claiming error both
in the application of law and in the establishment of facts made by the Frostating
Court of Appeal. On 24 October 1997, the Supreme Court concluded that the
authors were not entitled to reindeer herding on the area in question and
dismissed the appeal by a majority decision (4-1).
2.7 In the "Aursunden Case 1997", the Supreme Court attached substantial
importance to its previous judgement of 6 July 1897, concerning the rights
to reindeer grazing in the western part of the disputed area. The Court considered
that "the courts were considerably closer to the evidence a century ago"
and that "one must be wary of disregarding the Supreme Court's 1897 assessment
of the evidence". The area under dispute in 1897 did, however, extend
further to the west than the claim presented in the 1997 Supreme Court case.
Regarding the question of reindeer grazing rights in the eastern part of the
area under dispute in the 1997 case, which had not been covered by the 1897
judgement, the Court found that the Supreme Court's 1897 ruling "must
have more or less the same legal force".
2.8 The dissenting Supreme Court Justice Matningsdal, stated however, that
"In evaluating the facts of the case, I assign less importance to the
1897 Supreme Court judgement than the first-voting Justice does. If the starting
point is that the grazing rights are not legally binding on the eastern part
of the area, there will have to be a complete reassessment of the evidence
without prejudice to the result of the Supreme Court's 1897 evaluation of
evidence." Although the majority in the "Aursunden Case 1997"stated
that the question in dispute in many respects implied a recurrence of the
dispute that led to the Supreme Court's 1897 ruling, it made its decision
on the basis of current legislation.
2.9 The disputed area in the "Aursunden Case 1997" constitutes 4-5
per cent of the Riast/Hylling reindeer herding district, but according to
the authors, its grazing value is far more important. Furthermore, the authors'
loss of the herding rights in the "Storskarven area", that was disputed
in both the "Aursunden Case 1997" and the 1897 ruling and which
is quite limited in size, makes it impossible for them to gain access to large
continuous surrounding areas which in practice only may be accessed by encroaching
on the forbidden area.
2.10 As a consequence of the Supreme Court's ruling in the "Aursunden
Case 1997", the authors lost approximately 120 square kilometres of grazing
fields in the reindeer district of Ryast/Hylling. Additionally, the authors
have lost approximately 33 square kilometres in another court case, the "Tamnes
Case" of 6 November 1997.
2.11 There are also other cases pending which, due to the practice of the
Supreme Court, could result in further loss of grazing fields for the authors.
2.12 First, the authors and herdsmen of the Essand reindeer herding district
are engaged in a new court case concerning the North/West parts of the district,
the "Selbu Case", covering approximately 90 square kilometres of
the Riast/Hylling area. In this case, the Frostating Court of Appeal on 17
August 1999 ruled in favour of the authors by a majority (3-2). The minority
voted against the authors and argued in terms of the Supreme Court's majority
in the "Aursunden Case 1997". An appeal was lodged to the Supreme
Court on 19 October 1999. At the time of the authors' initial submission,
the Supreme Court had yet not decided whether the appeal should be admitted.
2.13 Second, a new conflict has arisen in the "Holtålen",
in the eastern part of Riast/Hylling reindeer herding district, covering approximately
450 square kilometres. However in another dispute, the so-called "Kvipsdal
Case", concerning a small area in the middle of the Femund reindeer herding
district, the court ruled in favour of the authors.
2.14 In the aforesaid "Aursunden Case 1997", the Supreme Court relied
on the 1897 judgement, and in the latter case, the Supreme Court made reference
to a Supreme Court decision from 1892 in respect of the same area. Part of
the material submitted to the Supreme Court both in the 1897-case and the
1892-case, was a study on the Sami population in southern Norway published
in 1888 by Professor in ethnology Yngvar Nielsen. In this study, Professor
Nielsen launched a new theory in opposition to the common view up till then,
implying that the Sami people had migrated from the north to the Roros area
in the middle of the eighteenth century and were intruders to the area. The
theory gained support from the Lap Commission which was appointed in 1889.
According to the authors, the Supreme Court attached great importance to this
theory, and based its judgement on the fact that farmers had settled in the
area in question before the Samis entered the area. Resent research, however,
shows that the Samis entered southern Norway more than 150 years earlier,
and archaeological studies indicate that the Sami people has been present
in southern Norway since before the Middle Ages.
2.15 To illustrate the Lap Commission's approach to the Samis, the authors
have submitted the following translation of its report, page 33: "Another
matter is that one should respect the laps' rights. But also, when evaluating
the laps and the inhabitants' mutual rights and obligations towards one another,
one must keep in mind the various circumstances of their trade, and the farmer,
during his hard and difficult cultivating work, often carries hard burdens,
while the lap, whose life style changes from hardship to laziness, usually
escapes those."
2.16 The Lap Commission continues as follows on page 41: "… when it comes
to the communities of Sondre Trondhjem and Hedemarken, the farmers began cultivating
land long before the laps arrived, and had to a large extent started to exploit
valleys and mountains. Therefore, there is no doubt that it is the laps who
forced themselves on the farmers and have been a nuisance ever since. In later
times, the farmers apparently have cultivated acres, established mountain
farms and carried out other clearance work in the mountain areas where the
laps previously might have wandered without restrictions, but usually the
laps' rights cannot be assumed to have been violated, due to the fact - as
stated in the Commission's proposal of 1883 - that these rights cannot be
recognized to be of such nature that they might exclude or prevent a rational
development of agriculture and progress."
2.17 At the end of the nineteenth century, the Norwegian Government issued
instructions denying Sami children the right to use the Sami language in school
and adopted provisions entailing that only persons who spoke Norwegian were
entitled to have properties apportioned. The Ministry of Interior stated (2)
on 2 February 1869 that: "… in the economic respect and, except for the
nomads of Finmark County, who remain in Norway all year round, there can be
no doubt that the nomadic culture is such a great burden for Norway and that
it has no corresponding advantages, that one must unconditionally desire its
cessation."
2.18 The communication is supported by the Sami Assembly, the Board of Reindeer
Husbandry and the Sami Reindeer Herder's Association of Norway.
The Complaint
3.1 The authors allege violations of their Covenant rights because the State party has failed to recognize and protect their right to let their herds graze on their traditional grazing grounds, in violation of article 27 in conjunction with article 2 of the Covenant. Furthermore, they allege a violation of article 26, because the Norwegian Supreme Court based its considerations on establishment of facts made in the nineteenth century when the Samis where discriminated against and the Norwegian landowners' claim for private property rights were favoured.
3.2 The authors allege that the State party has violated article 27 in conjunction
with article 2 of the Covenant by failing to ensure the authors' right to
enjoy their own culture. They refer to the Committee's General Comments No.
23 and 18, (3) and to the cases of Ominayak v. Canada, (4)
Sara et al. v. Finland, (5) Ilmari Länsman et
al. v. Finland, (6) Kitok v. Sweden, (7)
and Jouni E. Länsman v. Finland, (8) which concern
the rights of indigenous people under the Covenant.
3.3 In particular, the authors recall that the Committee has recognized that
article 27 imposes an obligation on the State parties, not only to protect
immaterial aspects of indigenous culture, but also to offer legal protection
for the material foundation of such culture (9). Subsequently,
for the interpretation of article 27 of the Covenant, the authors refer to
article 1, paragraph 2 of the Covenant which requires that all peoples must
be able to freely dispose of their natural wealth and resources, and that
they may not be deprived of their own means of subsistence (10).
3.4 With regard to the two cases of Länsman v. Finland, where the Committee
did not find violations of article 27, the authors point to four differences
between those cases and the present case. First, they allege that the question
at issue in the two Länsman cases was whether or not an isolated action
from the State party represented a denial of the rights under article 27,
whereas in the present case the authors claim that the current system of justice
violates these rights. Second, the reindeer herding activities in the Länsman
cases were only disturbed by activities in the area, whereas the authors are
deprived of reindeer herding areas. Due to the negative outcome of the "Aursunden
Case 1997", the "Korssjofjell Case" and the "Tamnes Case",
as well as possible negative outcomes of the pending "Selbu" and
"Holtaalen" cases, the authors have experienced several reductions
of their reindeer grazing rights.
3.5 Furthermore, since the Aursunden area is an integrated part of a herding
area of vital importance for the district of Riast/Hylling, and by denying
the authors access to Aursunden, they have practically no access to attached
areas. Thus, the authors run a risk of having to close down their entire reindeer
husbandry. They contend that the only means to prevent the reindeer from grazing
in the area in dispute in the "Aursunden Case 1997" and the "Korssjofjell
Case", would be to either fence in the outer boundary of the area, or
to intensify the watching of the herds. According to the authors, neither
one of the alternatives would be realistic, since the fences would be covered
by snow in the winter season, and the expenses of upkeep would be unduly heavy.
3.6 Third, it should be noted that contrary to the two Länsman cases,
the Supreme Court in the "Aursunden Case 1997", dismissed the appeal
without discussing the authors' rights under article 27 of the Covenant. Finally,
the authors point to that the Supreme Court in the "Aursunden Case 1997"
attached decisive importance to the judgement of the Supreme Court in 1897,
when the Samis where subjected to blatant discrimination.
3.7 They contend that the Norwegian Supreme Court and the State party in general
have failed to protect the material foundation of the southern Sami culture
in accordance with the provisions set forth in article 27 and article 2 of
the Covenant, by attaching crucial importance to assessments made in a period
of time characterized by discrimination and forced integration of the Sami
people and by an official view that Sami reindeer breeding was a burden to
the Norwegian farming population.
3.8 The authors' also contend that Norwegian law regarding the acquisition
of rights derived by use since time immemorial, as it has been interpreted
and practised by the Norwegian courts, in itself constitutes a violation of
article 27. By failing to recognize Sami culture and perception of law, and
by setting the same requirements for the acquisition of the right to herd
reindeer as it sets in other matters of property law, Norwegian courts have,
in effect, made it impossible for the authors and Sami people in many areas,
due to their nomadic lifestyle, to acquire legal grazing rights and thereby
to enjoy their own culture.
3.9 To acquire legal grazing rights on the basis of use since time immemorial,
the authors will have to prove to the Court that they have used the area in
question for more than a hundred years. This has proven to be difficult in
practice, since the requirements for the acquisition of grazing rights derived
by use since time immemorial, do not take into its consideration either the
specific features of reindeer herding, nor Sami culture and perception of
land rights. The requirements are established on the basis of grazing rights
for livestock, thus, sporadic grazing is not considered sufficient for establishing
legal grazing rights.
3.10 Reindeer herding makes heavy demands on acreage, and reindeers virtually
never graze in the same area year after year. Instead, reindeers make use
of the whole area fitted for grazing. It is the nature for reindeer to adapt
to their surroundings, the topography, the pasture situation, weather and
wind conditions. These conditions determine the extensiveness of the area
needed for grazing. Since the use of land is necessary for the maintenance
of the authors' culture, the effect of the Norwegian requirements for land
acquisition is that the authors are deprived of their fundamental rights under
article 27 of the Covenant. The authors refer to the Sami Parliament's statement
of 27 November 1997.
3.11 The authors contend that it is difficult to prove earlier settlements
in disputed areas, since their huts and fences have been made of material
that decomposes, and the Sami people has never had a written culture.
3.12 They further claim that the State party has failed to take an active
role in protecting their rights, by not intervening in the numerous conflicts
that have been brought before the courts by landowners of the authors' reindeer
herding districts over the past 10 years. The authors and Samis in general
endure years of conflicts, court actions, and personal suffering, both economically
and personally, because of the State party's reluctance to intervene before
the conflict is determined by a Supreme Court judgement.
3.13 The authors have requested that the State party expropriate the right
to reindeer grazing in the areas of the "Korssjofjell Case" and
the "Aursunden Case 1997", but the petitions are still pending before
the administrative authorities.
3.14 Finally, the authors claim that the State party has violated article
2 in conjunction with article 27, by failing to ensure the authors' rights
to enjoy their own culture.
3.15 In respect of their claim of a violation under article 26 of the Covenant,
the authors claim that the Supreme Court in the "Aursunden Case 1997"
judgement, failed to protect the authors from discrimination, since it based
its establishment of facts on those made by the Supreme Court in 1897, at
a time where the general opinion of the Samis was discriminatory. They contend
that the distinction between the authors and the private landowners in the
disputed area is not based on objective and reasonable criteria.
3.16 The authors contend that the domestic remedies have been exhausted through
the national lawsuits of the "Korssjofjell Case", the "Aursunden
Case 1997", and the "Tamnes Case" which have all been decided
finally by the Norwegian Supreme Court. There is still a lawsuit pending,
in the "Selbu Case", and a new conflict has arisen in a large area
between Aursunden and Selbu called "Holtaalen". Although the authors
primarily request the Committee to evaluate whether the Supreme Court in the
"Aursunden Case 1997" and the "Korssjofjell Case", and
whether the State party in general have failed to protect the material foundation
of the southern Sami culture, and whether the Norwegian legal system in itself
comprises violations of the Covenant, the authors contend that the Committee
should take both final and pending cases into its consideration. The authors
believe that they cannot be expected to continue to make the same requests
to the same national courts, on the basis of almost the same facts for each
and every area within their district, before the Committee can decide whether
or not the Covenant has been violated.
3.17 The authors have filed an application for expropriation to the administrative
authorities in Norway so as to ensure that lands for reindeer grazing is available.
Nevertheless, they consider it practically impossible to avoid that reindeer
enter the areas covered by the decisions in the "Korssjofjell Case"
and the "Aursunden Case 1997", and thus they run a constant risk
of being charged for illegal use of these areas. The authorities have a discretionary
power to decide the application for expropriation. The examination is expected
to be long and the outcome is uncertain. According to the authors, it has
yet not occurred that Sami herdsmen in a similar position to the authors'
have been given full reparation by expropriation. In spite of the fact that
the expropriation case is pending, the authors consider that after more than
a hundred years of dispute with private landowners, domestic remedies should
be considered exhausted or ineffective.
The State party's submission on the admissibility of the communication
4.1 By note verbale of 16 November 2000, the State party made its submission on the admissibility of the communication. The State party contests the admissibility of the claims under articles 2 and 26 for lack of substantiation, and the claim under article 27 for non-exhaustion of domestic remedies and because the authors cannot be deemed victims within the meaning of article 1 of the Optional Protocol.
4.2 In relation to the claim under article 27 and the requirement under article
1 of the Optional Protocol, it points to the authors' "main argument
is that Norwegian law regarding the acquisition of rights derived by use since
time immemorial, as it has been interpreted and practised by the Norwegian
courts, in itself constitutes a violation of article 27." and considers
this to be an actio popularis which should not be addressed by the Committee.
The State party contends that the issue before the Committee should be whether
the authors' rights under the Covenant have been violated by the decisions
of the courts in the specific cases, which concern the authors.
4.3 Furthermore, the State party recalls that all the court cases referred
to in the communication, concern the authors' grazing rights on privately
owned land, under Norwegian private law. The State party emphasizes that such
cases involve the balancing of legitimate private interests, on the one hand
that of the Sami population, and, on the other hand, the landowners' right
to protection of their property. It recalls that private ownership is protected
by the Norwegian Constitution, and as part of the First Protocol to the European
Convention on Human Rights, which is incorporated into Norwegian law, and
considers that these provisions should be regarded when considering to what
extent the State parties are under an obligation to implement standards in
civil law, whereby a group enjoys preferential treatment due to their ethnicity.
4.4 The State party recalls that the establishment of a reindeer herding district
does not in itself establish grazing rights within that district. The herdsmen
must in addition to belonging to the particular herding district, have a legal
basis in Norwegian law for their grazing rights in relation to the landowners,
such as use since time immemorial, contract or expropriation. In this context,
it emphasizes that in both the "Korssjofjell Case" and the "Aursunden
Case 1997", the Supreme Court found that the authors had not acquired
grazing rights in the disputed area, i.e. the authors had never had such rights
to the areas in question. This is contrary to the apparent supposition of
the communication, that the grazing rights have been lost.
4.5 With regard to the authors' claims under articles 2 and 26, the State
party argues that the evidential weight given by the Supreme Court in the
"Aursunden Case 1997" to the findings in the 1897 judgement was
based on the authors' arguments that the Supreme Court's assessment of the
facts in 1897 had been wrongful. The essence of the authors' claims was, as
opposed to the 1897 ruling, that they had acquired grazing rights to the area
through sufficient use of the land since time immemorial. As regards the 1897
case, the Supreme Court stated in 1997:
4.6 "This case involved the submission of copious evidence, with testimony
from parties and witnesses on behalf of the Samis and the landowners alike.
In addition, the court of first instance visited the site. At that time, a
question regarding the remains of Sami settlements was also at issue. I attach
importance to the fact that the courts were considerably closer to the evidence
a century ago, mainly the alleged use of the area under dispute for the purpose
of grazing reindeer. Several of the witnesses who testified in the court of
first instance, on whose ruling the Supreme Court founded its judgement, had
experience (of the situation) dating all the way back to the 1820s."
4.7 According to the State party, the Supreme Court in 1997, also considered
the authors' claims put forward to the Committee under articles 26 and 2,
and found that there was no evidence supporting that the Supreme Court judges
in 1897 had been biased in their assessment of evidence. The Supreme Court
in 1997, stated that:
4.8 "It is clear from the Supreme Court's judgement (of 1897) that the
court attached decisive importance to comprehensive testimony on the existence
and frequency of reindeer grazing in the disputed area itself. There are no
grounds for the view that the court was biased from the outset in the weighing
of evidence."
4.9 The State party submits that the authors de facto request review of the
court's findings as to the evidence of the case. On the basis that the authors
have not adduced any material, which could give basis for a review of the
Supreme Court's findings, the State party contends that the authors' claims
under articles 26 and 2 of the Covenant should be declared inadmissible for
lack of substantiation.
4.10 In relation to article 27 of the Covenant, the State refers to the authors'
allegations that the State party has failed to fulfil its positive obligations
imposed by that article, in particular by setting the same requirements for
the acquisition of rights to the use of land by the Samis as it would in other
matters of property law. In this connection, the State party submits that
even if one presupposes that such obligations are applicable in the present
case, it does not necessarily follow that the State would have to fulfil them
by lowering the requirements in domestic property law with regard to the Samis.
Instead, the Samis interests have been safeguarded through the institute of
expropriation if sufficient grazing rights have not been established previously
within the reindeer herding areas.
4.11 To that effect, the authors have been afforded the right to petition
the State party to secure necessary grazing rights through expropriation.
The State party submits that this option constitutes an available and effective
remedy that has not been exhausted in the present case.
4.12 In that connection, pursuant to the "Korssjofjell Case" in
which the Supreme Court stated that the administrative designation of herding
districts was not decisive for grazing rights under private law, the Reindeer
Husbandry Act Section 31 was amended in 1996. In order to extend the Sami
users' rights within the herding areas, the law was amended to allow for expropriation
of land to ensure such users' rights. According to the preparatory works of
the law,(11) the purpose of the amendment was to:
4.13 "give governmental authorities the necessary means of taking active
steps to secure Sami reindeer herding interests. Current legislation provides
no such powers. Without such an extension of the statutory provision for expropriation,
it will not be possible for the authorities to prevent or resolve conflicts".
4.14 Following this amendment, the principle of securing necessary grazing rights through expropriation has been part of the State party's policy, and of the Ministry of Agriculture's instructions to the concerned authorities. Furthermore, with particular regard to the areas concerned in the "Aursunden Case 1997" and the "Korssjofjell Case", the Ministry of Local Government and Regional Development in a report to the Parliament,(12) states that expropriation of reindeer herding rights may be introduced to secure the Sami situation, but that before going to the extent of expropriation, every effort should be made to achieve amicable arrangements like leasing agreements in which the State takes a part.
4.15 On 2 April 1998, the authors filed claims for expropriation to the Norwegian
Government, concerning the disputed land in the "Aursunden Case 1997",
and on 9 April 1999, concerning the "Korssjofjell Case". At the
date of the State party's submission, these were the only petitions received
by the Norwegian Government after the 1996 law amendment. In relation to the
other cases invoked by the authors, they won the "Kvipsdal Case"
and the "Selbu Case", the latter is still pending before the Supreme
Court, and they have not filed a claim for expropriation in the "Tamnes
Case".
4.16 According to Section 12 of the Expropriation Act of 23 October 1959,
the parties shall be encouraged to try and reach amicable settlements before
expropriation proceedings are initiated. Regarding the "Aursunden Case
1997", the Ministry of Agriculture therefore appointed a negotiating
committee on 4 November 1998, and the landowners appointed their own representative
negotiating committee. The authors were heard during the negotiating process
through meetings with the government appointed committee, and through written
comments on a draft agreement and the proposed agreement with the landowners.
On 4 February 2000, these committees reached an agreement that they recommended
to their respective groups.
4.17 The agreement includes approximately 80 per cent of the 121 square kilometres
grazing land comprising the subject of the petition for expropriation, and
the erection of a reindeer fence of approximately 40 kilometres. The purpose
of the fence is to facilitate the fulfilling of the herdsmen's statutory obligation
to keep their reindeer under adequate control and on legal grazing land. According
to the proposed agreement, the State party will pay the annual grazing rent
and the cost of erecting and maintaining the reindeer fence. The State party
has paid all the negotiating costs, amounting to NOK 430,000, and the stipulating
cost of erecting the reindeer fence is NOK 4.2 million.
4.18 In spite of this recommended agreement, the authors advised the Ministry
of Agriculture in May 2000, that they maintained their petition for expropriation.
The Government is confident that the Ministry of Agriculture will secure the
authors' interests either by entering into the recommended agreement and/or
by deciding to expropriate. Either way, the Norwegian Government will propose
to the Parliament to grant the costs involved.
4.19 The same procedure as described above will probably be applied to the
petition for expropriation concerning the disputed land in the "Korssjofjell
Case". Furthermore, the State party submits that the court decisions
at issue so far have had no effect on the authors' actual use of the disputed
land for reindeer herding purposes, and that the recommended agreement in
the "Aursunden Case 1997" presupposes that the State party shall
pay for the Sami use of the disputed land from the date of the Aursunden judgement
of 24 October 1997.
4.20 The State party submits that the possibility of petitioning for expropriation constitutes an available remedy within the meaning of article 5 of the Optional Protocol. It considers that the Committee is not in a position to consider whether the authors are victims of a violation of article 27 as long as their expropriation petitions are pending.
The Comments by the authors
5.1 By letter of 13 August 2001, the authors commented on the State party's submission.
5.2 The authors contest the State party's allegation that they are not victims
within the meaning of article 1 of the Optional Protocol because it considers
that the claim constitutes an actio popularis. They contend that they are
personally affected by the law regarding the acquisition of rights derived
by use since time immemorial as it has been interpreted in both the "Aursunden
Case 1997" and the "Korssjofjell Case". Thus, they do not ask
the Committee to review national legislation in abstracto, but the loss of
grazing rights in disputed areas should be seen in connection with prior reductions
of grazing rights in the same district due to final court decisions, as well
as possible reductions due to cases pending before the courts or administrative
authorities.
5.3 In this context, the authors inform that the dispute with the landowners
in the Selbu municipality, the "Selbu Case", was decided by the
Supreme Court in plenary on 21 June 2001 in favour of the authors. The first-voting
Justice Matningsdal, emphasized inter alia the significance of the topography
and the reindeer' extensive use of the land when deciding the content of the
criterion use as basis for the acquisition of grazing rights according to
the rules on rights derived since time immemorial. He concluded that one has
to adapt the requirement of land use to the specific nature of reindeer herding,
thus opening for a less intensive use of land - as compared to the herding
of sheep and cows - as a basis for the acquisition of reindeer grazing rights,
and he emphasized the methodological problems for the Samis to prove former
use of lands as grazing areas for reindeer husbandry.
5.4 The authors contend that the approach applied in the "Selbu Case",
was not applied in either the "Korssjofjell Case" or the "Aursunden
Case 1997", thus leading to the loss of grazing areas of vital importance
to the authors, in violation of their Covenant rights. Furthermore, the Supreme
Court in the two latter cases seemed unwilling to pay the same attention to
the topography when drawing a line between legal and illegal herding areas.
5.5 With regard to the State party's statement that the authors' claims under
article 27 need to be balanced with legitimate private property interests,
the authors submit that their rights under article 27 of the Covenant were
not given due weight in the "Aursunden Case 1997" and the "Korssjofjell
Case" judgements. They find that the practice of the law regarding acquisition
of rights derived by use since time immemorial in these decisions does not
take into proper account the special characteristics of reindeer herding compared
with e.g. the herding of sheep and cows, and is not fitted to secure the authors'
rights to practice their culture. The authors contend that this lack of due
regard to the special situation of the Sami people with respect to the application
of Norwegian rules on users rights has led to a distinction between Norwegian
farmers and the Sami reindeer herdsmen which is not built on reasonable and
objective criteria. On the contrary, the authors should have been subjected
to preferential treatment pursuant to articles 26 and 27 in order to regain
balance and equality between the authors and the landowners, to protect the
Sami culture.
5.6 In response to the State party's allegation that the authors' supposition
that they had lost the grazing areas in the disputed areas of both the "Korssjöfjell
Case" and the "Aursunden Case 1997" is incorrect since the
Supreme Court found that the authors had not acquired grazing rights in the
disputed area in the first place, the authors state that the Supreme Court
accepted that the Sami people had used the areas in question for more than
100 years, and thus maintain their allegation that the authors de facto lost
their grazing rights in these areas.
5.7 In respect of their claim of a violation of articles 26 and 2 of the Covenant,
the authors submit that they do not ask the Committee to evaluate all facts
in the "Aursunden Case 1997", but maintain their allegation that
the Supreme Court in that case did not make a full and independent evaluation
of the facts, but instead attached decisive importance to prior evaluations
of facts based upon unacceptable views of the Samis. This opinion has been
supported by professor, and now Supreme Court justice Jens Edvin A. Skoghoy,(13)
who states the following regarding the "Aursunden Case":
5.8 "In my opinion the majority in the Riast/Hylling Case attached too
great importance to the ruling from 1897. The view of the public authority
on the Sami culture has changed since then, and one cannot rule out that the
evaluation of evidence made by the Supreme Court in 1897 was influenced by
the attitude of the public authorities at that time. In addition, recent historical
research has supplied the Supreme Court's historical picture from that time.
In my opinion, the Supreme Court should have made an independent assessment
of evidence."
5.9 In respect of the State party's allegation that the authors have not exhausted
domestic remedies by not pursuing administrative avenues for expropriation,
the authors recall the principle that only such remedies must be sought that
are effective and available to the authors and the application of which is
not unreasonably prolonged.
5.10 With regard to the recommended agreement for the disputed areas in the
"Aursunden Case 1997", the authors attach two letters of January
2001 from the Ministry of Agriculture, where the Ministry informs that only
38 per cent of the landowners wish to enter into the agreement. In a letter
from the landowners' attorney of 26 March 2001, the landowners object to the
agreement on several grounds. The negotiations have thus so far failed, and
the authors question that this agreement will secure their interests.
5.11 Furthermore, the authors note that their petition for expropriation in
the "Aursunden Case 1997" was filed more than three years ago (on
2 April 1998), and is still pending in spite of the State party's statement,
that the decision regarding the land under dispute is expected in the first
part of 2001. The authors consider it uncertain whether the outcome of this
petition will be satisfactory.
5.12 The State party argued that the court decisions at issue so far have
had no effect on the authors' actual use of the disputed land for reindeer
grazing purposes. However, while awaiting the outcome of their petitions for
expropriation, the authors on 25 August 2000, were subjected to a criminal
charge for illegal use of the land north of Aursunden, and they fear being
subjected to further charges for illegal use of the disputed areas in question.
On 23 April 2001, the Uttrondelag Police District followed up the criminal
charge by issuing a fine of NOK 50,000, and the authors, rejecting this fine,
are awaiting trial on 7-9 January 2002.
5.13 Finally, the authors draw attention to the economic impact the private
lawsuits have on the authors. In principle the authors must personally cover
expenses related to the lawsuits. However, these expenses have so far been
recovered from the State funded Reindeer Herding Fund, with approximately
NOK 1.3 million. The consequence is that the funding of other projects through
the Reindeer Herding Fund suffers.
Additional observations by the State party
6. By note verbale of 7 March 2002 , the State party informed the Committee that the court of the first instance on 21 January 2002, acquitted the authors in the criminal case regarding the illegal use of land north of Aursunden. The judgement has been appealed, and is thus not final. It contends, however, that these criminal proceedings have no relevance to the present case, since they stem from a dispute between private parties.
Issues and proceedings before the Committee
7. By decision of 21 December 2000, the Special Rapporteur on New Communications, decided to separate the Committee's consideration of the admissibility and the merits of the case.
Consideration of admissibility
8.1 Before considering any claim contained in a communication, the Human Rights Committee must, in accordance with rule 87 of its rules of procedure, decide whether or not the communication is admissible under the Optional Protocol to the Covenant.
8.2 The Committee has ascertained that the same matter is not being examined
under another procedure of international investigation or settlement for purposes
of article 5, paragraph 2 (a) of the Optional Protocol.
8.3 In respect of articles 26 and 2, the Committee notes the authors' arguments
that the Supreme Court in the "Aursunden Case 1997" attached importance
to the Supreme Court decision in 1897, and that the latter decision was based
upon discriminatory views of the Samis. However, the authors have not provided
information which would call into doubt the finding of the Supreme Court in
the "Aursunden Case 1997" that the Supreme Court in 1897 was not
biased against the Samis. It is not for the Committee to re-evaluate the facts
that have been considered by the Supreme Court in the "Aursunden Case
1997". The Committee is of the opinion that the authors have failed to
substantiate this part of their claim, for the purposes of admissibility,
and it is therefore inadmissible under article 2 of the Optional Protocol.
8.4 In respect of the alleged violation of article 27 in conjunction with
article 2 of the Covenant, the State party objects to the admissibility on
the grounds that the authors are not victims in the terms of article 1 of
the Optional Protocol, and that the authors have failed to exhaust domestic
remedies under article 5, paragraph 2 (b) of the Optional Protocol.
8.5 The Committee notes the State party's argument that the authors' claim
constitutes an actio popularis, since the authors cannot be considered victims
of a violation by the State party of article 27 of the Covenant, in the terms
of article 1 of the Optional Protocol. However, the Committee finds that the
authors' claim relates to denial of their reindeer herding rights in specific
areas. It therefore rejects the State party's claim that this part of the
communication be rejected under article 1 of the Optional Protocol.
8.6 Regarding the State party's allegation under article 5, paragraph 2 (b)
of the Optional Protocol, that the authors have failed to exhaust domestic
remedies, the Committee notes that the State party has argued that the authors
have not exhausted the remedy of claiming expropriation to the administrative
authorities. Although the authors have pursued the domestic judicial remedies
in their disputes with the landowners in the "Tamnes Case", the
"Aursunden Case 1997" and the "Korssjofjell Case", their
petitions for expropriation in the two latter cases are still pending, whereas
the authors have not petitioned for expropriation in the former case. The
Committee recalls (14) that for the purpose of article 5,
paragraph 2 (b) of the Optional Protocol, an applicant must make use of all
judicial or administrative avenues that offer him a reasonable prospect of
redress. The application for expropriation, a remedy provided by the 1996
law, is still pending. It would therefore appear that domestic remedies have
not been exhausted.
8.7 However, the question is whether the application of these remedies has
been unreasonably prolonged. The Committee notes the authors' argument that
they have pursued domestic judicial remedies for more than a century and that
their petitions for expropriation, which were initiated in 1998 and 1999,
are still pending, making the avenues for a remedy unreasonably prolonged.
8.8 The Committee considers that the period of time it has taken for the authors
to obtain a remedy, may not be gauged from the time the Samis have litigated
grazing rights, but from the time the authors themselves have sought a remedy.
The Committee notes that the authors brought their claims for expropriation
on 2 April 1998 in the "Aursunden Case" and on 9 April 1999 in the
"Korssjofjell Case". As part of the process, a negotiation was established
which recommended an agreement in February 2000, but this agreement was rejected
in May 2000. This forced the authorities to reopen the expropriation procedure.
8.9 The Committee considers that the amendment of the Reindeer Husbandry Act
and the subsequent negotiations aiming at providing a remedy for the authors,
provide a reasonable explanation for the length of the examination of the
authors' claim. It cannot conclude that the Norwegian legislation, obliging
the authors to follow the procedure of settling their claims with the landowners
before bringing a claim of expropriation, is unreasonable. The Committee also
notes that while the authors have been subjected to one case of a criminal
charge for illegal use of the disputed land for which they have been acquitted,
they have been able to continue their reindeer herding to the same extent
as before the relevant Supreme Court judgements. The Committee therefore cannot
conclude that the application of domestic remedies has been unduly prolonged.
The authors' claim under article 27 is inadmissible for the non-exhaustion
of domestic remedies, under article 5, paragraph 2 (b) of the Optional Protocol.
8.10 The Committee is of the opinion that given the new remedy provided by
the 1996 law, the claim must be considered inadmissible. Nevertheless, the
State party is urged to complete all proceedings regarding the authors' herding
rights expeditiously.
9. The Committee therefore decides:
(a) that the communication is inadmissible under articles 2 and 5, paragraph
2 (b) of the Optional Protocol;
(b) that this decision shall be communicated to the author and to the State party.
_____________
[Done in English, French and Spanish, the English text being the original version. Subsequently to be issued also in Arabic, Chinese and Russian as part of the Committee's annual report to the General Assembly.]
* The following members of the Committee participated in the examination of the present communication: Mr. Abdelfattah Amor, Mr. Nisuke Ando, Mr. Prafullachandra Natwarlal Bhagwati, Mr. Maurice Glèlè Ahanhanzo, Mr. Louis Henkin, Mr. Ahmed Tawfik Khalil, Mr. Eckart Klein, Mr. David Kretzmer, Mr. Rajsoomer Lallah, Ms. Cecilia Medina Quiroga, Mr. Rafael Rivas Posada, Sir Nigel Rodley, Mr. Martin Scheinin, Mr. Ivan Shearer, Mr. Hipólito Solari Yrigoyen and Mr. Maxwell Yalden.
** The texts of a dissenting individual opinion signed by Committee members Mr. Louis Henkin, Mr. Martin Scheinin and Mr. Solari Yrigoyen is appended to the present document.
Dissenting individual opinion by Committee members
Mr. Louis Henkin, Mr. Martin Scheinin and Mr. Solari Yrigoyen
We are of the view that the communication should have been heard on its merits. The main ground on which the majority bases its inadmissibility decision is article 5, paragraph 2 (b), of the Optional Protocol, i.e., non-exhaustion of domestic remedies. For several reasons, in our view this conclusion is erroneous.
First and foremost, we do not agree that petitioning the administrative authorities of the State party, for the purpose that they institute expropriation proceedings to secure the reindeer herding rights of the authors, is at all an effective remedy within the meaning of article 5 (2) (b) of the Optional Protocol. The authors have already exhausted one line of judicial remedies by having their case adjudicated up to the Supreme Court. The authors are not even a party in the expropriation proceedings (see paragraph 4.16), which, therefore, cannot be taken as constituting an effective domestic remedy to be pursued by the authors. At most, the authors have exhausted their additional remedy related to expropriation simply by filing the petition in a manner that allows the initiation of the expropriation proceedings. What results from those expropriation proceedings, and within which time frame, would be a matter for the consideration of merits when the Committee addresses the State party's measures aimed at giving effect to the article 27 rights of the authors.
Secondly, even assuming that the actual expropriation proceedings constitute a remedy that needs to be exhausted by the authors, those proceedings are already unreasonably prolonged within the meaning of the last sentence of article 5, paragraph 2, of the Optional Protocol. After losing the Aursunden case in the Supreme Court - which process itself required some time - the authors filed their petition for expropriation on 2 April 1998. Almost three years later, on 26 March 2001, the proposed settlement was rejected by the landowners. Although the State party has since then made a submission to the Committee on 7 March 2002, it has not even informed the Committee of any later developments, given any explanation for the delay of four and a half years since the authors filed their petition, or presented any prospect of the time frame within which the matter will be decided. In the circumstances, the Committee should conclude that the remedy is unreasonably prolonged.
Thirdly, it appears that the article 27 rights of the authors are being affected by the Supreme Court rulings against them. Herding in areas previously used by them has become illegal, and the authors are subject to the risk of further legal proceedings and legal sanctions if they continue to herd their reindeer in those areas. It has not even been argued that the outcome of the expropriation proceedings would be relevant as a remedy for this part of the authors' claim under article 27.
Finally, in addition to the legal arguments above, there is also a reason of policy. Non-exhaustion of domestic remedies is a recoverable ground for inadmissibility. Even the majority of the Committee alludes to Rule 92.2 of the Committee's Rules of Procedure, according to which the authors may later request the Committee to review its inadmissibility decision. We find it unreasonable to declare the communication inadmissible although there is a clear expectation that the authors will in the near future request revitalization of their case.
As to the authors' claim under article 26, we find that it is unsubstantiated only if their claims under article 27 are declared inadmissible. In the context of their article 27 claims, which we find admissible, the article 26 claim is in our view also admissible.
(Signed): Mr. Louis Henkin
(Signed): Mr. Martin Scheinin
(Signed): Mr. Solari Yrigoyen
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Notes
1. The Covenant and the Optional Protocol to the Covenant entered into force for the State party on 23 March 1976.
2. Reference is made to the proposition to the Odelsting (a part of the Parliament), from 1871, p. 31.
3. Human Rights Committee's General Comment No. 23 (50), adopted on 6 April 1994 and Human Rights Committee's General Comment No. 18 (37), adopted on 9 November 1989.
4. Communication No. 167/1984, adopted on 26 March 1990.
5. Communication No. 431/1990, adopted on 23 March 1994.
6. Communication No. 511/1992, adopted on 26 October 1994.
7. Communication No. 197/1985, adopted on 27 July 1988.
8. Communication No. 671/1995, adopted on 30 October 1996.
9. Reference is made to Ilmari Länsman et al. v. Finland.
10. See the Human Rights Committee's consideration of Canada of 7 April 1999 under article 40 of the Covenant.
11. Proposition No. 28 to the Odelsting (1994-95) p. 31.
12. Report to the Parliament No. 18/1997-98.
13. Reference is made to his book "Tvistemaal" (1998), p. 757.
14. Reference is made to Pereira v. Panama, Case No. 437/1990, adopted on
21 October 1994, paragraph 5.2.