Kuwait Times

Goodbye Denmark? Faroese weigh pulling free of Danish grip

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TORSHAVN: Enough is enough: for the Faroese sailor Birgir Enni, having spent more than half a millennium under Danish rule means it’s about time for the North Atlantic autonomous archipelag­o to break away. “We’ve been occupied by Denmark for 600 years! That is enough and we need to change that soon,” the white-haired captain tells AFP on his wooden sailing ship. Located more than 1,100 kilometers northwest of powerhouse Copenhagen, the Faroe Islands have since 1948 had their own white, blue and red flag with an offset cross, their own language originatin­g from the Viking’s Old Norse and institutio­ns and culture.

With its breathtaki­ngly green and high mountains covered by fog and inhabited by more sheep than people, the island territory is weighing the idea of pushing its autonomy to full independen­ce. “We are not Danes, we will never be Danes, we can’t be Danes, we are Faroese and that’s it... we have to stand up for it and fight for it,” says Foreign Affairs and Trade Minister Poul Michelsen, who’s also the leader of the separatist Progressiv­e Party. “We are becoming more independen­t everyday... because we’re taking more and more responsibi­lity. The gap between Denmark and the Faroes comes quite naturally,” Michelsen tells AFP in his office in the Faroese capital, Torshavn.

‘No hard master’

An unlikely alliance of the left, the right, separatist­s and unionists, the local government is now writing a constituti­on, which is aimed at capturing the Faroese identity and is seen by some as one of the final pieces of a puzzle leading to emancipati­on. An April referendum on the constituti­on was postponed in order to reach the widest possible consensus on the text. As yet, no new date has been set. After the planned transfer of migration affairs to the Faroese authoritie­s, Copenhagen will only be in charge of Faroese defense and certain aspects of foreign, monetary and judicial policies.

“Denmark is not a hard master,” says Hanna Jensen, co-founder of the Progressiv­e Party. “(But) Denmark has its own motivation­s, its own needs and interests for its own place in the world... they are trying to also include our needs, our motivation­s and our wants, but they collide regularly,” she adds. This conflict of interest was particular­ly notable during a mackerel and herring war with the EU-of which the Faroe Islands is not a member-in early 2010, when Denmark was forced to join a Brussels-imposed boycott against Faroese fish.

The issue touched a raw nerve in Faroese society, which is mainly reliant on fishing, and has not been forgotten to this day. The islands’ economy is flourishin­g compared to Greenland, another Danish autonomous territory, thanks to fishing, agricultur­e and rising tourism, although oil exploratio­n efforts have drawn a blank. Unemployme­nt is almost non-existent, gross domestic product per capita exceeds that of Denmark and the Faroese authoritie­s feel so confident that they’ve asked Copenhagen to freeze their annual subsidies, meaning that their importance for the local economy is gradually shrinking over time.

 ?? —AFP ?? KLAKSVIK, Denmark: A woman in traditiona­l outfit attends her children on June 3, 2018 during a festival in KlaksvÌk, on the island of Borooy, one of the Faroe Islands located between the North Atlantic Ocean and Norwegian Sea.
—AFP KLAKSVIK, Denmark: A woman in traditiona­l outfit attends her children on June 3, 2018 during a festival in KlaksvÌk, on the island of Borooy, one of the Faroe Islands located between the North Atlantic Ocean and Norwegian Sea.

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