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GREENLAND

Greenland women demand compensation from Denmark for forced contraception

A group of 67 women from Greenland on Monday filed claims for compensation from the Danish government for being fitted with intrauterine devices (IUDs) without their consent decades ago.

Greenland women demand compensation from Denmark for forced contraception
This photograph taken on August 17, 2023, shows Arctic rabbits standing in the remote Eastern Greenland village of Ittoqqortoormiit. Photo: Olivier MORIN / AFP

Many of the women were only teenagers when they received coils or IUDs under a programme, discretely organised by Denmark, set up to limit birth
rates in the Arctic territory.

While it ceased to be a colony in 1953, Greenland remained under Copenhagen’s control.

The plaintiffs are claiming 300,000 kroner each.

A series of podcasts based on national archives and published in the spring of 2022 by Danish broadcaster DR revealed the scale of the campaign as Denmark
and Greenland are re-examining their past relationship.

The world’s largest island — located in the Arctic some 2,500 kilometres from Denmark — has its own flag, language, culture, institutions and prime minister.

Since the 2009 Self-Government Act, only currency, the justice system and foreign and security affairs fall under Denmark’s authority.

But it relies heavily on a Danish grant, which makes up a quarter of its GDP and more than half its public budget.

Launched last year, a commission examining grievances against the Danish state is due to publish its findings in 2025, but the complainants want
recompense before then.

“We don’t want to wait for the results of the enquiry,” psychologist Naja Lyberth, who initiated the compensation claim, told AFP.

“We are getting older, the oldest of us, who had IUDs inserted in the 1960s, were born in the 1940s and are approaching 80,” she explained.

“We want to act now,” Lyberth stressed.

In the 60s and 70s, some 4,500 young Inuit had IUDs inserted without their consent or that of their families, according to DR’s reporting.

A large number of women were unaware that they were wearing a contraceptive device and, until recently, Greenlandic gynaecologists found IUDs in women who
were unaware of their presence, according to Lyberth.

“It’s already 100 percent clear that the government has broken the law by violating our human rights and causing us serious harm,” she added.

According to her, the government will likely refuse their requests pending the results of the commission — in which case the matter will be taken to court.

In 2022, Denmark apologised and paid compensation to six Inuit who were taken from their families in the 1950s to take part in an experiment to build a Danish-speaking elite in the Arctic territory.

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GREENLAND

Greenland boycotts Nordic Council over ‘discrimination’

The Danish autonomous territory of Greenland said on Wednesday it was suspending participation in the Nordic Council cooperation forum due to the discrimination to which it says it is subjected.

Greenland boycotts Nordic Council over 'discrimination'

Greenland complained it had been excluded from an upcoming meeting on foreign and security policy to which only ministers from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden — as well as non-Council member Germany — had been invited.

None of the Nordic region’s autonomous territories — Greenland, the Faroe Islands and Aland — had received invites.

“I cannot continue to participate in events where there is discrimination between the participants,” Greenland’s Prime Minister Mute Egede wrote in an open letter sent late Tuesday to the current holder of the Nordic Council presidency, Sweden.

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He said he would reconsider Greenland’s suspension if the Nordic Council allowed it to “participate on equal terms with the other member states on all subjects — including foreign, security and defence policy subjects — in all Nordic Council forums.”

The decision comes amid strained relations between Copenhagen and Nuuk, the latter increasingly frustrated by Denmark’s control over Arctic issues.

The world’s largest island, located in the Arctic some 2,500 kilometres (1,550 miles) from Denmark, Greenland has its own flag, language, culture, institutions and prime minister. But it still relies heavily on a Danish grant, which makes up a quarter of its GDP and more than half of its public budget.

Defence, justice and foreign affairs are all decided by Copenhagen.

Last year, a Greenland commission presented a draft constitution to parliament, which the territory could use if it were to ever negotiate independence from Denmark.

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