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Denmark's Prime Minister apologizes personally to Greenland woman over forced contraception

The Danish Prime Minister apologized in person to women on Wednesday who had been victims of decades-long, involuntary contraception campaigns. These campaigns have left the islanders with deep wounds and damaged their relationship with their former colonial powers.

Between 1966 and 1991 - the year Greenland gained control over its healthcare system - thousands of women and girls, some as young as 12, were fitted with intrauterine device without their consent or knowledge.

Mette Frederiksen said, "I do not believe that we can achieve the equal and proper relationship many of us want unless we open even the darkest pages," at a Nuuk, Greenland, capital ceremony.

The ceremony is another step in Denmark’s efforts to improve ties with Greenland, since U.S. president Donald Trump began to vow this year to seize control of the vast island rich in resources and located in the Arctic for security purposes.

"The apology I offer today does not just concern the past. This apology is not only about the past, but also our present and future. Frederiksen spoke to victims who were wiping away tears.

PHYSICAL and PSYCHOLOGICAL SCARES

A recent investigation revealed that 4 070 women were fitted with intrauterine device by the end 1970, or roughly every other Greenlandic woman of childbearing years.

Many women have reported severe abdominal pain, and some have been unable to have children after the device has been removed. This is often due to severe infection.

Receiving an apology doesn't mean we accept what happened. "We are here because we don't accept what happened," said Greenland Prime Minister Jens Frederik Nielsen. He wore black.

It is up to us all to take the next step.

Naja Lyberth thanked Frederiksen's apology for creating a space for Greenlanders who shared the same trauma to process it.

Lyberth, a 14-year-old girl who got her IUD at the age of 14, said that "the state has now stressed that we are equal spirits within the Danish realm." Reporting by Louise Rasmussen, Editing by Gareth Jones

(source: Reuters)