Greenland Community Says No To Statue Removal

Greenland Statue Referendum: Given Direct Say, People Vote AGAINST Removal

Statue
CHRISTIAN KLINDT SOELBECK/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images
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People in Nuuk, Greenland, have voted overwhelmingly against removing a statue vandalised by activists.

In June, the clifftop statue of Norwegian missionary Hans Egede, who founded Nuuk — then known as Godthåb — and became Bishop of Greenland in the 1700s, was smeared with red paint and the slogan “DECOLONIZE”, prompting the authorities to organise a referendum on the monument’s fate.

But, despite the fact that Greenland, a territory of Denmark with a large degree of self-government — for example, it voted to leave the European Economic Community, as the European Union then was, in the 1980s, in large part to stop the bloc from controlling its territorial fisheries — is populated mainly by Greenlandic Inuits, with Danes and other Scandinavians accounting for less than 10 per cent of the population, the public voted overwhelmingly to keep the statue.

Voters who wished to maintain Egede’s monument as an important part of Greenland’s built heritage took over 60 per cent of the votes cast.

The poll marks one of the only times, if not the only time, the public have been given a direct say over historic monuments deemed “problematic” by left-liberal activists in the wake of George Floyd’s death in the United States, which has spawned a movement which has progressed rapidly from protesting police brutality to demanding the political and sometimes physical dismantling of Western institutions and symbols.

Local governments in countries such as Britain have set up dozens of audits and reviews of statues to decide whether they should be removed, replaced, or “put in context” through additional information boards and so on describing their subjects’ supposed crimes — but none appear to have offered the public a chance to decide at the ballot box.

Whether or not Nuuk’s authorities will respect the outcome of the vote in Greenland does remain to be seen, however, with the administration set to issue its final ruling on Egede’s statue in September.

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