...

Logo Pasino du Havre - Casino-Hôtel - Spa
in partnership with
Logo Nextory

Denmark to pay €40,000 each to Greenlandic women and girls who were forcibly given contraception

Business • Dec 10, 2025, 5:23 PM
2 min de lecture
1

Denmark has reached a deal to compensate thousands of Indigenous women and girls in Greenland over cases of forcible contraception carried out by health authorities over decades starting in the 1960s.

The Danish health ministry said on Wednesday that women who were given contraception against their knowledge or consent between 1960 and 1991 can apply for individual payouts of 300,000 Danish kroner (about €40,200) starting next April.

An estimated 4,500 women could be entitled to compensation in Greenland, which is a semiautonomous territory of Denmark.

The Inuits, many of them teenagers at the time, were fitted with intrauterine contraceptive devices, known as IUDs or coils, or given a hormonal birth control injection – either without learning details or giving their consent.

“The IUD case is a dark chapter in our shared history. It has had major consequences for the Greenlandic women who have experienced both physical and psychological harm," Health Minister Sophie Lohde said in a statement.

“Unfortunately, we cannot remove the pain from the women, but compensation helps to acknowledge and apologise for the experiences they have gone through,” she added.

The women can seek compensation through June 2028.

An independent investigation published in September found that more than 350 Greenlandic Indigenous women and girls, including some 12 years old and younger, had reported they were forcibly given contraception by health authorities.

In all, more than 4,000 women and girls are believed to have been affected.

In August, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen issued a public apologyfor the events, saying that while the past cannot be changed, “we can take responsibility”.


Yesterday

US Federal Reserve cuts key interest rate but signals higher bar for future reductions
Business • 7:17 PM
3 min
Lower rates from the Fed can bring down borrowing costs for mortgages, auto loans, and credit cards over time, though market forces can also affect those rates.
Read the article
Denmark to pay €40,000 each to Greenlandic women and girls who were forcibly given contraception
Business • 5:23 PM
2 min
An estimated 4,500 women could be entitled to compensation.
Read the article
Chemical in dark chocolate may help slow ageing, new study finds
Business • 4:34 PM
2 min
Scientists found a link between a chemical found in dark chocolate and signs of slower biological ageing.
Read the article
Amid Russia's war in Ukraine, how much are weapons companies making?
Business • 3:56 PM
4 min
The increase in revenue across EU arms companies was caused by the war in Ukraine and the perceived threat from Russia.
Read the article
Eurozone's new star: Portugal crowned 2025 'economy of the year'
Business • 3:47 PM
2 min
The accolade comes from British weekly The Economist, which ranked the 36 richest countries in the world. Luís Montenegro calls the recognition a “fair recognition to the merit and hard work of the Portuguese people”.
Read the article
Silver’s record run fuelled by possible Fed shake-up and tariff fears
Business • 11:08 AM
3 min
Silver prices have roughly doubled this year, climbing over $60 an ounce, pushed up by a supply deficit, tariff uncertainty, and expectations of Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.
Read the article
A rare drug made from scientists' blood is saving babies from botulism. Here's how
Business • 9:44 AM
7 min
The drug uses antibodies from volunteers vaccinated against botulism to help babies too young to fight the disease on their own.
Read the article
Meet Thorvald, the robot protecting strawberries and grapes |Euronews Tech Talks
Business • 9:01 AM
1 min
Euronews Tech Talks sits down with Lars Grimstad, CTO and co-founder of the Norwegian agri-tech company Saga Robotics, to learn how its robots treat plants to reduce the use of chemicals.
Read the article
Can robots grow food on Earth and in space? |Euronews Tech Talks
Business • 9:00 AM
6 min
Robotics is being used to address agricultural challenges both on Earth and in space. But what are the potentials and the risks associated with this shift?
Read the article
South Korea says advertisers must label AI-generated ads
Business • 8:27 AM
4 min
South Korean officials said they will ramp up screening and removal of problematic AI-generated ads and impose punitive fines.
Read the article
Money talks, but is Spain listening? Unpacking Madrid's tax policy
Business • 6:01 AM
7 min
As Europe doubles down on a competitiveness drive, experts warn that Spain’s tax policies could be hitting growth.
Read the article
UK doctors urge crackdown on energy drinks after man downs 8 cans per day, has a stroke
Business • 6:00 AM
3 min
After doctors asked the patient to stop consuming energy drinks, his blood pressure returned to normal.
Read the article
Australia’s social media ban for kids is here. Experts warn it could have ‘a lot of mistakes'
Business • 5:00 AM
7 min
Experts say Australia’s new social media ban might not change children’s online lives as much as regulators hope.
Read the article
Sperm donor with undetected cancer gene linked to nearly 200 children across Europe
Business • 12:38 AM
5 min
The Danish European Sperm Bank has acknowledged the donor’s sperm was overused and immediately blocked him once the mutation was discovered.
Read the article
Most people use AI agents for productivity and learning, Perplexity says
Business • 12:01 AM
3 min
Most adopters of the AI agent are highly educated, from rich countries, and work in either technology or knowledge-heavy fields, a new study found.
Read the article