Who are the Saami people of Lappland?

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Unlike in most of Europe, the life of the Saami people has not changed much in the past few centuries.
This is not Lappland.

… and why are they important to our Rh negative tribe?

http://www.firetown.com/2012/05/10/the-rh-negative-connection-the-history-of-the-basques-berbers-samis-and-guanches/

https://www.rhesusnegative.net/staynegative/page/10/?s=origin

Haplogroup V is also found in parts of Northwest Africa. It is mainly concentrated among the Tuareg inhabiting the Gorom-Gorom area in Burkina Faso (21%), Sahrawi in the Western Sahara (17.9%), and Berbers of Matmata, Tunisia (16.3%). The rare V7a subclade occurs among Algerians in Oran (1.08%) and Reguibate Sahrawi (1.85%).

Haplogroup V is a relatively rare mtDNA haplogroup, occurring in around 4% of native Europeans. Its highest concentration is among the Saami people of northern Scandinavia (~59%). It has been found at a frequency of approximately 10% among the Maris of the Volga-Ural region, leading to the suggestion that this region might be the source of the V among the Saami. Haplogroup V has been observed at higher than average levels among Cantabrian people (15%) of northern Iberia, and among the adjacent Basque (10.4%).

https://sites.google.com/site/n8iveuropean/home/neanderthal

In northern Scandinavia (Lapland), 24% of people are HLA-B27 positive, while 1.8% have associated ankylosing spondylitis.

A small group (<0.5%) of people infected with HIV are able to remain symptom-free for many years without medication.  

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17892849

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