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July 15, 2005

Six drown off Greenland coast

Three adults and three children drowned when they were sailing to Upernavik earlier this month. All on board the open boat were seen for the last time when they sailed away from Kangersuatsiaq.

After the party failed to arrive at their destination, a search was launched and soon the family’s empty boat was found drifting around. The bodies of the passengers were found near the boat.

siku circumpolar news

Alaska’s airline subsidy in jeopardy

The subsidy, established when the airline industry was deregulated in 1978, uses U.S. federal money to lower air-travel costs to 34 Alaska communities.

The Essential Air Service program’s aim is to provide a safety-net level of air service to the smallest and most isolated communities.

But the U.S. now plans to overhaul the program, cutting the number of communities eligible and making them bear some of the cost. Changes the Transportation Department is proposing include requiring communities to kick in at least 10 percent of the subsidy.


July 15, 2005

Alaska's airline subsidy in jeopardy

The subsidy, established when the airline industry was deregulated in 1978, uses U.S. federal money to lower air-travel costs to 34 Alaska communities.

The Essential Air Service program's aim is to provide a safety-net level of air service to the smallest amd most isolated communities.

But the U.S. now plans to overhaul the program, cutting the number of communities eligible and making them bear some of the cost. Changes the Transportation Department is proposing include requiring communities to kick in at least 10 percent of the subsidy.


July 15, 2005

Inuksuk in Oslo

Earlier this month, Nunavik’s master artist Mattiusi Iyaituk built an inuksuk in Oslo, similar to the one he built last year at the Canadian embassy in Iceland.

The stone came from Gjoa Haven and was designed by Joseph Suqslakm.

Iyaituk, who is president of the Inuit Art Foundation, assembled the inuksuk which was shipped to Norway in 13 pieces.

The inuksuk stands on the grounds of the Norwegian Maritime Museum near the Gjoa, the ship used by Roald Amundsen to sail through the Northwest Passage more than 100 years ago.


July 15, 2005

French president’s comments rile Finns

Recently, Jacques Chirac, the president of France, was overheard telling German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and Russian President Vladimir Putin that only Finland had worse food than Britain.

A Finnish member of the European Parliament and his British wife have since dared Jacques Chirac, the president of France, to sample a menu proposed by top Finnish chef.

It starts with a Finnish take on fish and chips, followed by wild mushroom soup with turnip rye pie, then baby lamb served with nettle mash. For dessert, there’s berries marinated in Arctic brambleberry wine and a pudding made from beestings — milk taken from cows immediately after they give birth — a Finnish specialty.

Chirac is expected to provide the wine.


July 15, 2005

Norway to export sea cucumbers

As the seabed along Norway’s coast abounds with sea cucumbers, Norwegians are now eyeing exports to China, which could be worth millions.

There are 31 species found along the Norwegian coast, from 20 to 1,200 metres deep. Local fishermen usually discard the sea cucumbers.

But they’re rich in proteins and vitamins A, B and C, and sea cucumbers can be eaten raw, fried or boiled. Sea cucumbers are considered to be a highly desirable health food product in Asia and a boost to sexual performance.

“The Chinese have eaten sea cucumbers for hundreds of years and they cannot manage to satisfy demand from their own catch and farming. So there can be a market for Norwegian sea cucumbers there,” said researcher Margareth Kjerstad at Møre Research centre in Norway.


July 15, 2005

Southern Norway swelters in heat while Alaska burns

On Monday, official thermometers at the University of Oslo’s meteorological station at Blindern soared to nearly 32C.

It was, by comparison, 26 in Rome, 28 in Malaga, Spain and 25 in the Canary Islands.

The highest temperature ever recorded in July in Norway was 35 in both Oslo and Trondheim on July 21 and 22, 1901.

Meanwhile, rising temperatures in Alaska have sparked an unusual number of storms along the state’s south-central coast this summer, with lightning strikes and fires responsible for burning more than one million acres.

In recent weeks, there have been thunderstorms nearly every day along the normally temperate south-central coastline.


July 8, 2005

U.S. cleaning global warming out of talks

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

Drafts of a statement on climate and energy that negotiators are preparing for this week's G8 summit of the leaders of the industrial nations show big differences between the United States and the other seven countries that make up the group: Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Russia.

Documents for the G8 obtained by The Observer show U.S. officials:

  • Removed all reference to the fact that climate change is a "serious threat to human health and to ecosystems";
  • Deleted any suggestion that global warming has already started;
  • Took out any suggestion that human activity was to blame for climate change.

Among the portions removed was the following: "Our world is warming. Climate change is a serious threat that has the potential to affect every part of the globe. And we know that ... mankind's activities are contributing to this warming. This is an issue we must address urgently."

"All of the changes in the June 14 draft are the result of the White House refusing to be part of any statement that says that action on climate change is urgent, that impacts are already being felt and that the science is strong," said Philip Clapp, president of National Environmental Trust.

Recently, the New York Times reported that a White House official who had previously worked for the American Petroleum Institute repeatedly edited government climate reports to downplay links between greenhouse gas emissions and global warming.


July 8, 2005

Midsummer brings magic and tragedy

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

In Finland's northernmost region of Lapland there were three accidental drownings on June 24, Midsummer Night, known as Juhannus in Finnish. Drownings are common in Finland during the summer as drunk party-goers head home across lakes in small boats and capsize. According to the Helsingin Sanomat newspaper, 11 drownings were reported on the 24th.

In Reykjavik, Iceland, 800 gathered for the midsummer night festival in Laugardalur in central Reykjavik.

The festival-goers assembled in the family park close to the open air swimming pool at Laugardalur. The pool was open and admissions were free.

According to Icelandic folklore, cows start speaking and seals take off their fur on Midsummer night, and stones are imbued with magical powers.


July 8, 2005

Turbot to go

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

There's a new plan to send fresh turbot from Ilulissat, Greenland to Europe.

Three days after being caught in the Ilulissat fiord, the fish would be served up at fancy restaurants in Denmark, France, Belgium and northern Germany.

The new company behind this plan is called Greenland Glacier Seafood and its shareholders include 42 fishers and residents in Ilulissat.

In addition to sending turbot to Europe, the company also plans to promote the Ilulissat's ice fiord, which is on the list of Unesco´s World Heritage sites, says the Sermitsiaq newspaper.


July 8, 2005

Expense account forces minister's resignation

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

Greenland's minister for housing, environment and traffic, Jens Napaatooq, resigned on June 23 after KNR Radio News and Nuuk TV, revealed he had racked up an expense account of over 400.000 Danish kroners ($80,000) last year.

He used the money at nightclubs, eating at expensive restaurants in his travels in Denmark, and even bought some drinks at a go-go dance bar in Copenhagen.

In an average a day in he spent about 1.400 kr ($325).

The cabinet held a meeting following Napaatooq´s resignation, and Premier Hans Enoksen determined he would assume Napaatooq´s portfolio until the government can appoint a new minister for housing, environment and traffic when legislative assembly members meet in the fall.


July 8, 2005

Police complaints on the rise in Greenland

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

Greenlanders do not seem happy with their police force's performance in the past year, national radio news channel DR reported.

Greenland's police complaint commission said complaints over police conduct had doubled compared with 2003.

The commission received 31 new reports last year, some of them quite serious. The increase is mostly due to criminal cases against police officers and episodes of prisoners suffering harm in police custody.

One case included a police officer who was charged with having a sexual relationship with a child under 15.


July 8, 2005

Danish club thwarted in bid for whale meat

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

The Greenlandic "Proviantclub" in Copenhagen tried to import almost one tonne of whale meat to Denmark, reports KNR radio news in Greenland.

But the whale meat is still in a freezer in Aalborg, Denmark.

The meat was sent from Greenland to Aalborg almost six months ago, but apparently it was imported without all the paperwork required by law.

About 800 Greenlanders in Denmark had established the buyer's club to import Greenlandic country food.

Greenlanders are permitted to import five kilos of whale meat and clubs may also purchase the meat as well.

But in this case there were apparently errors in the paperwork.

The department leader of the Royal Arctic Line in Aalborg explained said no breach of the law was intended, but the laws are "complicated."


July 8, 2005

Sisters reap reward for what they sew

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

Two aging sisters from Aasiaat received the 2005 Greenland Cultural Prize for maintaining the old tradition of sewing.

The 76-year-old twin sisters from Aasiaat received the highest cultural award, worth $10,000, on June 21, Greenland's National Day.

Benedikte and Regine Brandt now live in Aasiaat, but they are originally from a tiny community, Iginniarfiarfik, where they saw women working with seal skin and sewing since they were small.

The sisters started to work with sealskin, and after many years they learned how to make the complex Greenlandic traditional clothes.

"They maintained the old Greenlandic tradition of sewing skin, and had made the finest and most excellent things out of skins," said Greenland's minister for culture, Henriette Rasmussen, as she awarded Benedikte and Regine the cultural prize.

The cultural prize ceremony was held in the cultural house in Nuuk, Katuaq, and was transmitted direct on Greenland's television and radio networks.


July 8, 2005

No bear meat for homeless Alaskans

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

A Juneau homeless shelter has stopped serving donated bear meat after learning that Alaska prohibits non-profit groups from accepting wild game such as bear, fox and walrus.

"We didn't know that it is illegal," Jetta Whittaker, executive director of the Glory Hole, told the Anchorage Daily News.

The shelter accepted bear, which went into many recipes, including burgers, casseroles and spaghetti.

But last year, Whittaker learned that serving it was contrary to rules set by the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation. This year, that has meant turning down five offers of bear.

Shelter clients said they miss meat of any kind.

"I will eat whatever you put in front of me," one told the newspaper. "But you cannot live by starches alone."

Alaskan food safety officials said even if the organizations receive bear free from hunters, eating it can make people sick.


July 8, 2005

Arctic Ozone up this spring

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

The winter of 2004-2005 saw the second highest chemical ozone destruction ever observed over the Arctic.

Polar ozone is destroyed when chlorine, cold temperatures, and sunlight mix in the atmosphere eight to 50 kilometres above the Earth's surface. Ozone shields the earth from ultraviolet light, the high-energy light that causes sunburns and skin cancers, so low ozone levels could threaten the health of humans, fish and animals.

The Microwave Limb Sounder, an instrument on the Aura satellite, measured 50 per cent ozone loss, the second-highest level ever observed behind the 60 per cent loss measured in 1999-2000.


July 1, 2005

Tromsø, Norway rocks with "46664" concert

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

More than 15,000 people watched stars including Annie Lennox, former Led Zeppelin front man Robert Plant and Peter Gabriel perform in Tromsø, Norway on June 14.

Nelson Mandela, the 86-year-old former South African president, hosted the concert, which was sponsored by Norway's parliament, as part of his "46664" anti-AIDS campaign. "46664" refers to Mandela's prison number during his 27 years in jail under apartheid.

Mandela smiled and waved from a giant outdoor stage by the sea and snow-capped mountains.

"This has indeed been a long journey from Johannesburg in South Africa to Tromsø in Norway. But we are pleased to be here. Tonight, the people of Tromsø can stand tall and proud. In hosting this concert, you have signaled to the world that you care," Mandela said. "In joining you in Tromsø, we have brought Africa to you. Even though there is a great distance between our lands, we know that we share a common humanity. This week the people of Tromsø have demonstrated this common humanity."

Mandela said Tromsø would become the first ambassador city for his 46664 movement.

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