Norwegian court orders slaughter of reindeer in overgrazing case

Reindeer herder Jovsset Ante Sara loses an appeal over a ruling that he must cull 41 of his 116-strong herd to prevent overgrazing of the land in the Norwegian Arctic.

Reindeer in northern Russia
Reuters Archive

Reindeer in northern Russia

A small reindeer herder from the indigenous Sami community in the Norwegian Arctic on Thursday lost a much-publicised appeal with Norway's top court over a ruling that he must cull 41 of his 116-strong herd.

Jovsset Ante Sara, who has twice successfully challenged an order to reduce the size of his herd, claimed he can't make a living with that scale of slaughter.

The government appealed because its policy aims to prevent overgrazing on the tundra where Norway's estimated reindeer population of 220,000 live.

Norway's Supreme Court said on Thursday that the cull order did not violate Sara's rights.

"As I read it, the ruling doesn't take into account the rights of the Sami people," defence lawyer Trond Pedersen Biti said, adding they would appeal to the Human Rights Council, the UN body in Geneva, Switzerland, charged with promoting and protecting human rights.

Earlier this month, the herder's sister Maret Anne Sara, drew attention to the case when hanging up a curtain made of 400 bullet-ridden reindeer skulls outside Norway's parliament in Oslo.

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