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July 21, 2006

Greenland needs a jail

Many are calling for a high-security jail in Greenland to reduce waiting lists and so offenders can be housed closer to home.

That’s because the number of offences committed in Greenland has risen by 20 per cent over the last couple of years, and convictions for violent crime are at a 30-year high. At the same time, 190 criminals are on a waiting list to serve time and some of them are waiting as long as 18 months for a jail cell to open.

One proposal would see Denmark’s next budget including a provision for a jail in Greenland.

“Something has to be done as soon as possible to solve the most acute problems with the justice system in Greenland, instead of just sitting back and awaiting the next major reform. The most recent case involving two adults charged with the sexual abuse of 30-plus children in Nuuk is a clear example of the need for a solution. I think the proposal for a secure unit in Greenland should be included in next year’s budget,” said Per Kaalund, a Danish MP.

Kaalund said the worst criminals in Greenland have to serve their sentences in Denmark, far from their families, which lessens their prospects for rehabilitation. A jail should be opened in Greenland as soon as possible, he said.

“It doesn’t require a great deal of imagination to envisage the consequences if, for example, a child were to be sexually abused then meet the perpetrator shortly afterwards because of an absurdly long waiting list,” he added.

Kaalund also said he thinks that legal rights in Greenland are threatened by the use of lay judges instead of trained judges in serious criminal trials.


July 21, 2006

Look, don’t shoot, whale watchers say

Norwegian whalers gunned down a whale before the eyes of tourists out on a whale-watching expedition, reports the Aftenposten.

A boatload of tourists on a whale watching safari paid to go out to sea on a boat from Andenes in northern Norway.

But while the tourists were admiring one of the whales at sea, a Norwegian whaling boat approached and shot it.

“This really wasn’t what we came to see,” Leontien Dieleman of the Netherlands told local newspaper Andøyposten.

The tourists also saw another whaling boat hauling one of their own dead whales up on deck.

Geir Maan, skipper on board the whale-watching boat Reine, called the incident “unfortunate.”

He said he and his crews try to explain Norway’s controversial whale hunt to the tourists keen to see whales.

He said authorities have used “a lot of time and energy to get whale hunting accepted in Norway.” Shooting a whale in front of tourists was “like throwing oil on a fire that was about to die out.”

Jan Kristiansen, who represents the whalers, defended the shootings. He claimed the whalers were simply taking advantage of the nice weather, when the hunting is best.

“Many of the whaling boats had been tied up at the dock for several days, waiting for better weather,” he said. “When it finally came, we have to make the most of it.”


July 14, 2006

Circumpolar world celebrates midsummer in style

Countries across the European Arctic each have their own special way of celebrating the summer solstice or midsummer.

The longest day of the year is June 21, but midsummer celebrations started June 23 this year and continued throughout the weekend.

Decorating a midsummer pole, singing traditional songs and folk dancing are among the Swedish customs. A meal of potatoes, pickled herring and local vodka follows.

The St. Hans-tradition in Norway includes setting small fires at edge of fiord grilling meat, sausages or fish over the bonfires.

Juhannus Päivä in Finland means a sauna (wood-fired steambaths), bonfires, good food and drink, and family. But every year about 10 Finns drink too much and drown, either by falling out of boats or swimming while intoxicated.

In the old days, people in the Russian countryside celebrated "Ivan Kupala Day." They burned fires, jumped over the flames and went searching for treasures under the ferns thought to bloom only on midsummer night.


July 14, 2006

Greenland bans narwhal exports

Greenland has slapped a ban on all narwhal products, with a few exceptions.

"The decision becomes effective immediately, however, previously issued permissions may still be used," say a June 16 announcement on the decision.

This ban applies to jewelry and art objects made from narwhal tusk. Whole teeth are also covered by the ban.

"Since the ban becomes effective immediately, tourists visiting Greenland this year may no longer repatriate handicraft or other items including narwhal tusk or other parts of the animal," says the announcement.

However, residents of Greenland will still be able to buy narwhal products, and be able to export the products in connection with the moving of household effects. And residents will still be able to bring personal jewelry and possessions from travel abroad.

"However, the effects brought along must be brought back to Greenland," says the ruling.

The reason for the ban is that the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources cannot document that "exports are without importance to the catch."

"As the catch is also not deemed sustainable since it exceeds the recommendations from international advice, it can therefore not be ruled out that exports of narwhal products contribute to harming the Greenlandic population of narwhals," says the announcement.

According to researchers and international marine mammal management bodies,= the narwhal population in Greenland has declined to only 25 per cent of its original size. There may be as few as 1,500 narwhal left - down from a population of about 30,000 not so long ago.

The ban follows moves by the Committee on the Trade of Endangered Species, CITES, to severely limit narwhal trade.

Greenlandic exports of narwhal products have already been subjected to limits in relation to the European Union. With the decision by the Greenland Home Rule Government, tourists' export of narwhal products to EU countries is now also included.

The ban is considered temporary, says the announcement, and will be maintained as long as it cannot be ruled out that exports "may harm our narwhal population."


July 7, 2006

Greenland's ice sheet - smaller than ever

The Greenland ice sheet reached a record in total melt extent in 2005.

June melting varies considerably from year to year, but so far the melting this June is looking quite similar, reports LiveScience.

A satellite image of the west coast of Greenland, taken by NASA's Terra satellite on June 26, shows the melt zone along the edge of the Greenland ice sheet.

Unlike the bright, uniform white of the ice farther inland, the melt zone appears in shades of gray when it is becoming saturated with water, and gray-blue melt ponds dot the fringes of the melt zone.

The ponds can cause even more destruction to the ice sheet. That's because as the water in the ponds works its way down to the base of the ice, it eases the friction between the ice and the underlying rock, allowing the ice to move toward the sea more quickly.

Glaciologists estimate that the melting of the Greenland ice sheet typically reaches its peak around July 20 each year.

If Greenland's ice sheet were to completely melt, it would raise world sea levels by several metres.

 

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