Alta controversy | |
Date: | 1970 – 1982 |
Place: | Alta, Finnmark, Norway (hunger strikes held in Oslo and Stockholm) |
Causes: |
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Methods: | Protests, civil disobedience, blockade, hunger strike |
Arrests: | Alfred Nilsen Svein Suhr Per Flatberg |
Result: | Alta Power Station is constructed
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Fined: | –20,000 |
Casualties Label: | Arrests and fines |
Side1: | Folkeaksjonen mot utbygging av Alta-Kautokeinovassdraget
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Side2: | Norwegian Government |
The Alta conflict[1] or Alta controversy was a series of protests in Norway in the late 1970s and early 1980s concerning the construction of a hydroelectric power plant in the Alta River in Finnmark, Northern Norway.
The background for the controversy was a published plan by the Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate (NVE) that called for the construction of a dam and hydroelectric power plant that would create an artificial lake and inundate the Sámi village of Máze. After the initial plan met political resistance, a less ambitious project was proposed that would cause less displacement of Sámi residents and less disruption for reindeer migration and wild salmon fishing.
On 12 July 1978, (English: People's Action Against the Development of the Alta-Kautokeino River Basin|link=no) was founded, creating an organizational platform for first opposing and then resisting construction work. This group and others filed for an injunction in Norwegian courts against the Norwegian government to prevent construction from beginning.
On 1 May 1979, environmental minister Gro Harlem Brundtland wears a Sámi costume in inner Finnmark; "the opponents"[4] of the construction of [the dam in] Alta, view the performance as [being] tasteless [... for] an environmental minister that has not been listening to Sámi interests.
In the fall of 1979, as construction was ready to start, protesters performed two acts of civil disobedience: at the construction site itself at Stilla, activists sat down on the ground and blocked the machines, and at the same time, Sámi activists began a hunger strike outside the Norwegian parliament.
Documents that have since been declassified, show that the government planned to use military forces as logistical support for police authorities in their efforts to stop the protests.[5]
The prime minister at the time, Odvar Nordli, pre-empted such an escalation by promising a review of the parliament's decision, but the Norwegian parliament subsequently confirmed its decision to dam the river. More than one thousand protesters chained themselves to the site when the work started again in January 1981. The police responded with large forces; at one point 10% of all Norwegian police officers were stationed in Alta (during which time they were quartered in a cruise ship). The protesters were forcibly removed by police.
For the first time since World War II, Norwegians were arrested and charged with violating laws against rioting. The central organizations for the Sámi people discontinued all cooperation with the Norwegian government. Two Sámi women even travelled to Rome to petition the Pope.
The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the government in early 1982, at which point organized opposition to the power plant ceased, and construction of the Alta Hydroelectric Power Station was completed by 1987.
As the first serious political upheaval since the debate about Norwegian EC membership in 1972, the Alta controversy was important in several ways:
The NGO organised the opposition against the construction in the Alta controversy, and had at the most 20,000 members. Of these 10,000 actively participated in demonstrations, including the Stilla March. The organisation functioned as a cooperation between environmentalists and Sámi activists, and not only succeeded at putting focus on environmental issues but also on Sámi rights.
After their acts of civil disobedience, the four leaders, Alfred Nilsen,, Svein Suhr and Per Flatberg (information leader), were sentenced for encouraging illegal acts.
(Let the River Flow) was a 1980 Norwegian docudrama inspired by the events of the Alta protests.A 2023 film, by Ole Giæver, is a newer rendition of this story.
In 2014, in "one scene of the Donald Duck Christmas story, mining activists—clad in gákti—and a chain gang show up. Associations to the Alta conflict of the 1970s and '80s, where there was great resistance to the building of a dam on the Alta River, are clear", according to NRK. A documentary film Norwegian: Tidsvitne: Alta-kampen ("The Alta Struggle" episode of the series Norwegian: Tidsvitne) was produced by NRK.
A subplot in the 2019 animated musical film Frozen II where a dam built on tribal land by King Runeard, Elsa and Anna's grandfather, alludes to the Alta controversy.[6] [7] [8] In the film, Runeard had the dam built ostensibly as a gift to the Northuldra—a fictional tribe inspired by the Sámi people—but was actually a means to further subjugate the tribe whom the king distrusted for their reliance on magic–in an allusion to efforts to supplant Sámi shamanism.[9]