a vehicle drives towards the sign for the village of Drag, in the municipality of Tysfjord in Norway on Monday Nov. 27, 2017. A police report says that the Norwegian Arctic municipality of Tysfjord with fewer than 2,000 people saw at least 151 sexual assaults, including 43 rapes over the course of more than six decades. Most were never reported to the authorities. The majority of the victims and the suspected perpetrators in Tysfjord, in northern Norway, are part of the ethnic Sami community. Ajluokta is the Sami name for Drag. (Tore Meek/NTB scanpix via AP)

a vehicle drives towards the sign for the village of Drag, in the municipality of Tysfjord in Norway on Monday Nov. 27, 2017. A police report says that the Norwegian Arctic municipality of Tysfjord with fewer than 2,000 people saw at least 151 sexual assaults, including 43 rapes over the course of more than six decades. Most were never reported to the authorities. The majority of the victims and the suspected perpetrators in Tysfjord, in northern Norway, are part of the ethnic Sami community. Ajluokta is the Sami name for Drag. (Tore Meek/NTB scanpix via AP)

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — Generations of native Sami people living in remote northern Norway have been victims of rape and child sex abuse that has gone largely unreported and uninvestigated, police have acknowledged in a report citing deep failings in the way authorities operated there.

A police report covering the period from 1953 to August 2017 documented at least 151 sexual assaults, including 43 rapes, in the Arctic municipality of Tysfjord, which has a population of less than 2,000. Most of the cases were not reported at the time.

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The youngest of the 82 victims identified by the police was 4, while the 92 suspected offenders were aged between 10 and 80. Some people appeared on both lists. As well as the rapes, 40 cases dealt with sexual intercourse with underage children.

So far two people have been charged in 10 cases, but many cases have been dropped because the statute of limitations has expired.

The report by the Nordland police, where Tysfjord sits, was commissioned after Norwegian newspaper Verdens Gang last year published accounts of 11 men and women who claimed to have been assaulted.

Tone Vangen, head of the Nordland county, apologized after the publication of this week’s report, acknowledging that police “didn’t do a good job.”

Vangen told Norway’s NTB news agency that police had heard “tales from victims that offenders had gotten forgiveness from religious circles and the cases have in a way been settled.” She added that they saw that many had links to a conservative Lutheran revival movement started in Lapland in the middle of the 19th century.

“There is no reason to claim that ethnicity or belief is an explanation for the abuses,” she said. “At the same time there are mechanisms related to the (Sami) environment, which makes it difficult to get to investigate.”

Lars Magne Andreassen, a spokesman for the local Sami community, cited “loyalty, lack of confidence in authorities and the fact that police and health and social services have not had competence to see what has happened” as responsible for the perpetuation of the situation.

“There has been a huge failure in the whole safety net that should have been around the children who have been subjected to abuse in Tysfjord,” added Anne Lindboe, the children’s ombudsman — an advocate for children and young people in Norway.

Verdens Gang reported the case of a woman identified as Liv who said her father was jailed for raping her, but that other men raped or sexually assaulted her over a 10-year-period until she turned 19.

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Karl Edvard Urheim, a Sami folk singer who also said he was raped as a child, told the daily that “people there are incredibly good at shutting up, and that makes me angry.”

An estimated 40,000-60,000 Sami live in northern Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia and have their own language. Their situation has been compared to that of American Indians, but rather than establishing reservations for Sami, the region’s governments have sought to absorb them. In 1997, Norway’s King Harald V publicly apologized on behalf of the nation for its treatment of the Sami.

Samis have their own Parliament, and those in Norway are also represented in Norway’s Parliament.

A small number of them are still closely associated to nature and are involved in reindeer herding but also fishing, fur-trapping and hunting. However, their way of living has threatened by mineral mining, wind farms and extensive logging, which are encroaching upon reindeer herding grounds and fishing areas.