Thu. Nov 21st, 2024
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Climate activist Greta Thunberg has joined protesters in blocking entrances to Norway’s energy ministry, in a demonstration against wind turbines being built on land traditionally used by indigenous Sami reindeer herders.

Ms Thunberg, who is known across the world as a vocal advocate for ending the world’s reliance on carbon-based power, said the transition to green energy could not come at the expense of indigenous rights.

“Indigenous rights, human rights, must go hand-in-hand with climate protection and climate action,” she said. 

“That can’t happen at the expense of some people. Then it is not climate justice.”

Norway’s supreme court in 2021 ruled that two wind farms built in central Norway violated Sami rights under international conventions, but the turbines remain in operation more than 16 months later.

Reindeer herders in the Nordic country say the sight and sound of the giant wind power machinery frighten their animals and disrupt age-old traditions.

Sami singer-songwriter, actress and activist Ella Marie Haetta Isaksen said she had occupied the ministry’s reception with a dozen other demonstrators since Thursday.

“We are here to demand that the turbines must be torn down and that legal rights must be respected,” she said. 

Police forcibly removed them around 1:30am local time on Monday and detained them before releasing them.

They returned to the ministry, this time outside, about 6am local time.

A group of people sit outside a building. A sign laying on the ground in front of them says 'land back'.
Campaigners from Nature and Youth and the Norwegian Samirs Riksforbund Nuorat block the entrances to the Ministry of Oil and Energy. (NTB: Ole Berg-Rusten via Reuters)

The Sami protesters wore their traditional costume, often called gakti, inside out as a sign of protest.

The ministry said the ultimate fate of the wind farms was a complex legal quandary despite the supreme court ruling and was hoping to find a compromise.

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