The Norwegian government has resisted public pressure to offer a
mountain summit to neighboring Finland as part of its independence
centenary celebrations.
As a present to their Finnish neighbors, celebrating their independence
since 1917, a group of Norwegians had proposed giving them the peak of
the 1,361-metre (4,465-foot) high Mount Halti.
The gift would have been a way of correcting a geographical incongruity, as the Finnish border in the area is situated most of the way up the mountainside at
an altitude of 1,324 meters.
A Facebook campaign to hand over the immovable present garnered 17,000
signatures. But a legal roadbump brought the friendly scheme tumbling
down, halting the Halti plan.
"This creative proposal has received a very positive response from the
public," Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg said in a letter received
on Friday by the major of Kafjord, in northern Norway, who was a
protagonist in the mountainous gift.
"I welcome this and I see a clear sign that Norway and Finland have a
close relationship," Solberg continued.
However, he added that "border adjustments between countries raises
complex legal issues."
In this case the problems were insurmountable. The lofty gift-giving
idea ran up against Article 1 of the Norwegian constitution which
stipulates that the kingdom of Norway is 'indivisible and inalienable'.
"We will think of another worthy gift to celebrate the occasion of
Finland centenary," Solberg added.
Prior to its independence, the "Grand Duchy of Finland" was part of the
Russian empire.
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