Denmark Apologises for Greenland’s Forced Contraception Scandal

Over 4,500 Inuit women were fitted with contraceptive devices without consent between the 1960s and 1990s, leaving many infertile.

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Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen

Jean-Christophe VERHAEGEN / AFP

Over 4,500 Inuit women were fitted with contraceptive devices without consent between the 1960s and 1990s, leaving many infertile.

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has apologised to more than 4,500 Greenlandic victims of Denmark’s forced contraception campaign aimed at reducing the Inuit birth rate.

From the 1960s until 1992, Danish authorities forced about half of the island’s 9,000 fertile Inuit women to wear a contraceptive coil, or intrauterine device (IUD), without their or their family’s consent.

Many of the women were left sterile, and almost all of them have suffered from physical or psychological problems.

“We cannot change what has happened. But we can take responsibility. Therefore, on behalf of Denmark, I would like to say: I am sorry,” Frederiksen said in a statement.

“My apology on behalf of Denmark is also an apology for these other failures for which Denmark is responsible, where Greenlanders have been systematically treated differently and worse than other citizens of the kingdom.”

The practice of forced contraceptions continued on a smaller scale after 1992, when Greenland took over responsibility for its health system.

Greenland’s Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen also apologised in the same statement for the cases that occurred under Greenland’s control.

“I apologise to those of you who have been exposed to–and lived with the consequences of– interventions you did not ask for nor had control over,” he said.

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