It is the magazine Svensk jakt that has taken part in a memorandum written by the Renmark Inquiry's secretariat.

The committee has the task of investigating who has the legal right to grant hunting and fishing on state land.

The memorandum states that the Sami villages have good prospects of winning in new "Girja processes".

Do not want to differentiate between different types of hunting

In addition, it is stated that there is no reason to distinguish between small game hunting and other hunting when it comes to the lease.

In a debate post in Swedish hunting, the committee's chairman Eric M Runesson states that it is a political decision if the Sami villages are to be given the right to also grant moose hunting, but also states that the political decisions should be based on the current legal situation.

Hoping for solutions

In the same debate post, he urges that those who may be angry at the conclusions should direct their anger at him and not at Sami, Sami villages or the Sami Parliament.

"I therefore want to be clear that these are my legal assessments as a lawyer, not a Sami invention," he writes.

Birgitta Isaksson is chairman of the Hunters' Association in Norrbotten.

She is also on the Moderates' list for the municipal council in Kiruna.

She hopes that other lawyers will make different assessments than the Renmark Committee.

- There are certainly lawyers who will think just the opposite, she says.