Här är senaste nytt om Greta och Gruvan, från Guardian som i alla fall har en del fakta i sina artiklar. Givetvis är det de stygga britterna som först lämnade EU och nu ligger bakom gruvan. Företaget heter Beowulf! Beowulfs aktiekurs gick i taket när Bolund och resten avgick ur regeringen. Vi har en stygg, vit gubb-minister som "älskar gruvor". Den kvinnliga ärkebiskopen, som är invandrare har hutat åt regeringen och säger att gruvan inte är "andligen hållbar". Unesco är med på ett hörn och klagar.
Det är sedvanlig gruppbildning för att skapa konflikter i samhället.
Greta säger till Gardinen att hon oroar sig för att inkomsterna inte skall stanna i regionen! Annars verkar Greta konstant motarbeta Sverige. Men samerna har tydligen rätt att behålla något som är deras. Hon skäller på Sverige som vanligt. När Greta är missnöjd med svensk skogsindustri klagar hon hos EU, hon diskuterar inte med skogsägarna. Samer skall bestämma allt i sitt område enligt Greta, men svenskar skall lämna över allt till EU. Svenska politiker talar hon knappast med, hon kommunicerar nästan bara med EU-politiker.
Citat:
Greta Thunberg condemns UK firm’s plans for iron mine on Sami land
Beowulf Mining ‘hopeful’ for decision on mine in Sápmi despite opposition from activist, UN and Swedish church
A British company has fallen foul of Greta Thunberg, Unesco, Sweden’s national church, and the indigenous people in the north of the country over plans for an open-pit mine on historical Sami reindeer-herding lands.
The clamour of opposition was voiced as Beowulf Mining, headquartered in the City of London, suggested it was “hopeful” of a decision within weeks of a 5 sq mile iron-ore mine i
The company’s share price has been on a sharp upward trajectory since December when the Swedish Greens, who have opposed the plans, left the governing coalition and the Social Democratic business minister, Karl-Petter Thorwaldsson, declared that his party “loved mines” and hoped to open more.
the mine will destroy grazing areas and cut off the only viable migratory route
The archbishop of Uppsala, Antje Jackelén, who heads the Church of Sweden, has written an open letter to the Swedish prime minister, saying the proposed mine “is not existentially and spiritually sustainable”.
Thunberg, speaking to the Guardian during a visit to the Gállok site, said the government’s decision would be pivotal to Sweden’s future reputation. “The world’s eyes are on the Swedish government,” she said. “The profit that will be made from this mine will go to the British company not the local people who will have to pay for the long-term costs: the polluted air, water, lost biodiversity and lost traditions.
“It is just more and more of the idea that we can exploit other people, that we can exploit nature, and that needs to be brought to an end.”
Thunberg’s comments were echoed in a joint statement on Thursday by Francisco Calí Tzay, the UN’s special rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, and David R Boyd, the body’s special rapporteur on human rights and the environment.
“We are very concerned by the lack of good-faith consultations and the failure to obtain the free, prior and informed consent of the Sami, and over the significant and irreversible risks that the Gállok project poses to Sami lands, resources, culture and livelihoods,”
Beowulf claims its project will create 250 direct jobs and more than 300 indirect jobs in Jokkmokk during its initial 14-year lifetime. The company says there is potential for it to be working for 25 years if further iron ore deposits are identified.
In its statement, Beowulf said iron mineralisation of up to 389m tonnes had been identified at Gállok and the mine would represent just 0.5% of the Jåhkågaska community’s available pasture lands of 1,019 sq miles.
“You can show anything with statistics,” said Jonas Vannar, 42, a reindeer herder from Jokkmokk. “If you compare it to someone shooting an arrow to your heart, it’s a pretty small hole when you calculate the area of the wound compared to the entire body. Then it’s surely not possible to die from an arrow in your heart?”
https://www.theguardian.com/environm...greta-thunberg