Nelson Mail

Greenland’s gamble for a brighter future

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From his purchase of New Jersey casinos to his proposed acquisitio­n of Greenland, United States President Donald Trump’s real estate deals have always been plagued by bad timing. The US could probably have bought Greenland from Denmark in 1917, when it did buy the US Virgin Islands from the Danes, but he’s a century too late now.

Neverthele­ss, his latest bad idea does give us an incentive to catch up with what’s been happening in Greenland – and it’s quite interestin­g.

Trump may not know this, since he rarely reads intelligen­ce reports, but in November 2017 Greenland’s premier Kim Kielsen led a government delegation to Beijing to seek Chinese investment.

Greenland, the world’s biggest island, is not yet fully independen­t, but it is autonomous from Denmark in everything except foreign affairs and defence. Kielsen was looking mainly for Chinese investment in mining enterprise­s, but he was also interested in attracting a Chinese bid to build three modern airports on the island, which depends on World War II-era airstrips.

This set off a security panic in Nato, involving implausibl­e nightmare visions about Greenland getting so deep in debt to Chinese banks that it would end up letting China, which has comically declared itself a ‘‘near-Arctic nation’’, operate military aircraft from those airports.

The US military, which has a large air base at Thule in northern Greenland, then took fright. Washington strongly urged the Danish government, which provides two-thirds of Greenland’s budget revenue, to nip this threat in the bud.

Copenhagen had previously refused to fund the new Greenland airports, but late last year it suddenly came up with very low-interest loans for them. End of panic.

By then, Kielsen’s government in the tiny capital of Nuuk, population 17,000, had collapsed, but his Siumut Party came out ahead in the election last April, and he is back in power.

And the issue of Chinese mines in Greenland is still on the table.

In fact, there already is one in southern Greenland, producing uranium and rare earth metals for a Chinese-Australian consortium. Other projects potentiall­y involving Chinese capital, and Chinese workers, are under discussion, including a huge open-cast iron ore mine near Nuuk, a zinc mine in the north, and both offshore and onshore oil and gas leases.

For the 56,000 Greenlande­rs, 90 per cent of whom are Inuit, the geostrateg­ic implicatio­ns of Chinese investment are irrelevant – and they are probably right about that. What worries them, and occupies a central place in Greenlandi­c politics, is the cultural and social implicatio­ns of foreign investment by anybody, Chinese or not.

The Greenland Inuit are one of the few indigenous peoples who have full or almost full control over their own destiny, but the impact of the modern world on their traditiona­l culture has been as destructiv­e as it was for all the others: depression and other psychologi­cal illnesses, rampant alcoholism and drug use, and an epidemic of suicides.

So they face a choice. Do you go on trying to preserve what is left of the old Arctic hunting and fishing culture, although it’s already so damaged and discourage­d that it has the highest suicide rate on the planet? Or do you seek salvation in full modernisat­ion through high-speed economic growth, while keeping your language and what you can of your culture?

The decision was made in 2013, when the Siumut Party took power. It believes that modernisat­ion has gone too far to turn back now. Better to gamble on solving the huge social problems by enabling everybody to live fully modern, prosperous lives. If you’re no longer marginalis­ed and poverty-stricken, you’ll feel better about yourself.

Let us hope so, but the die is cast. Greenland will modernise, and in due course we will find out if that helps.

It makes little difference to Greenlande­rs whether the foreign investment comes from Denmark, China or the US, so long as they have political control – but they certainly don’t want to become Americans.

The ‘‘Greenland Purchase’’ is not going to happen. As Soren Espersen, foreign affairs spokesman of the Danish People’s Party, said last week: ‘‘If [Trump] is truly contemplat­ing this, then this is final proof that he has gone mad.’’

It makes little difference to Greenlande­rs whether the foreign investment comes from Denmark, China or the US, so long as they have political control.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Greenlande­rs face a difficult balancing act trying to preserve what is left of their Arctic hunting and fishing culture while pursuing modernisat­ion through high-speed economic growth.
GETTY IMAGES Greenlande­rs face a difficult balancing act trying to preserve what is left of their Arctic hunting and fishing culture while pursuing modernisat­ion through high-speed economic growth.
 ??  ?? Gwynne Dyer
Gwynne Dyer

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