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GREENLAND

Greenland announces first case of coronovirus infection

Greenland announced its first case of the novel coronavirus on Monday, as the autonomous Danish Arctic territory brought in restrictions to protect residents from the pandemic.

Greenland announces first case of coronovirus infection
The city of Nuuk back in 2007, with the Sermitsiaq mountain in the background. Photo: Oliver Schauf/Wikimedia Commons
“The first case of the new coronavirus has now been confirmed in Greenland,” according to a local government statement, citing the island's health service.
   
The infected patient lives in the capital Nuuk, and has been placed in home isolation, the government added.
   
Preparations have been initiated to cope with the new situation. It is important that citizens follow our recommendations now that the infection has reached our country,” Greenland's Prime Minister Kim Kielsen told a press conference, according to newspaper Sermitsiaq.
   
The Arctic island has already issued a number of recommendations to limit the spread of the disease.
 
All non-essential flights to and from Greenland, as well as domestic flights, are strongly advised against.
   
Public gatherings of more than 100 people are discouraged and citizens returning from high-risk areas are recommended to self-isolate for two weeks. And when Denmark closed its borders to tourists over the weekend, so did
Greenland.
   
Denmark colonised the two-million square-kilometre (772,000 square-mile) island in the 18th century. It is home to around 57,000 people, most of them from the indigenous Inuit community.
   
Since 2009, Greenland has been largely independent when it comes to its economic policy but foreign and defence issues remain under Copenhagen's control.
   
Denmark itself on Monday reported a total of 909 confirmed cases, with 11 in the country other autonomous territory the Faroe Islands. One COVID-19-related death has been reported.

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ENVIRONMENT

Greenland passes law banning uranium mining

Greenland's parliament voted Tuesday to ban uranium mining and exploration in the vast Danish territory, following through on a campaign promise from the ruling left-wing party which was elected earlier this year.

Greenland's parliament voted on November 9th to ban uranium mining. Prime Minister Mute Egede, pictured, said earlier this month he wanted to join the Paris climate agreement.
Greenland's parliament voted on November 9th to ban uranium mining. Prime Minister Mute Egede, pictured, said earlier this month he wanted to join the Paris climate agreement. File photo: Emil Helms/Ritzau Scanpix

The Inuit Ataqatigiit (IA) party won snap elections in April that were originally triggered by divisions over a controversial uranium and rare earth mining project.

The IA won 12 seats in the 31-seat Greenlandic national assembly, beating its rival Siumut, a social democratic party that had dominated politics in the island territory since it gained autonomy in 1979.

On Tuesday 12 MPs in the national assembly voted to ban uranium mining, with nine voting against. 

The IA had campaigned against exploiting the Kuannersuit deposit, which is located in fjords in the island’s south and is considered one of the world’s richest in uranium and rare earth minerals.

The project, led by the Chinese-owned Australian group Greenland Minerals, has not yet been officially abandoned.

But French group Orano announced in May it would not launch exploration despite holding permits to do so.

The massive natural riches of the vast island — measuring two million square kilometres, making it larger than Mexico — have been eyed by many, but few projects have been approved.

The island is currently home to two mines: one for anorthosite, whose deposits contain titanium, and one for rubies and pink sapphires.

While Greenland’s local government is not opposed to all mining activities, it has also banned all oil exploration over concerns for the climate and the environment.

Earlier this month Prime Minister Mute Egede said he wanted to join the Paris climate agreement, which Greenland is one of the few countries not to have ratified.

READ ALSO: Greenland seabed scoured for marine diamonds

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