-
End to record-long US government shutdown in sight
-
France's ex-leader Sarkozy says after jail release 'truth will prevail'
-
Atalanta sack coach Juric after poor start to season
-
Trump threatens $1 billion action as BBC apologises for speech edit
-
Gattuso wants 'maximum commitment' as Italy's World Cup bid on the line
-
Indian capital car blast kills at least eight
-
Deadly measles surge sees Canada lose eradicated status
-
Brazil's Lula urges 'defeat' of climate deniers as COP30 opens
-
Strangled by jihadist blockade, Malians flee their desert town
-
US Supreme Court declines to hear case challenging same-sex marriage
-
'Fired-up' Fritz sees off Musetti in ATP Finals
-
Injured Courtois set to miss Belgium World Cup qualifiers
-
Bulatov, pillar of Russian contemporary art scene, dies at 92
-
Fritz sees off Musetti in ATP Finals
-
US strikes on alleged drug boats kill six more people
-
Sarkozy released from jail 'nightmare' pending appeal trial
-
COP30 has a mascot: the fiery-haired guardian of Brazil's forest
-
The Sudanese who told the world what happened in El-Fasher
-
Three things we learned from the Sao Paulo Grand Prix
-
ASC acquire majority share in Atletico Madrid
-
Ferrari boss tells Hamilton, Leclerc to drive, not talk
-
Bank of England seeks to 'build trust' in stablecoins
-
China suspends 'special port fees' on US vessels for one year
-
French court frees ex-president Sarkozy from jail pending appeal
-
No link between paracetamol and autism, major review finds
-
Typhoon Fung-wong floods Philippine towns, leaves 5 dead in its wake
-
France's Sarkozy says prison a 'nightmare' as prosecutors seek his release
-
Guinness maker Diageo picks new CEO after US tariffs cloud
-
China suspends 'special port fees' on US vessels
-
US senators take major step toward ending record shutdown
-
Typhoon Fung-wong leaves flooded Philippine towns in its wake
-
From Club Med to Beverly Hills: Assinie, the Ivorian Riviera
-
The 'ordinary' Arnie? Glen Powell reboots 'The Running Man'
-
Typhoon exposes centuries-old shipwreck off Vietnam port
-
French court to decide if ex-president Sarkozy can leave jail
-
China lifts sanctions on US units of South Korea ship giant Hanwha
-
Japan death row inmate's sister still fighting, even after release
-
Taylor sparks Colts to Berlin win as Pats streak hits seven
-
Dreyer, Pellegrino lift San Diego to 4-0 MLS Cup playoff win over Portland
-
Indonesia names late dictator Suharto a national hero
-
Fourth New Zealand-West Indies T20 washed out
-
Tanzania Maasai fear VW 'greenwashing' carbon credit scheme
-
Chinese businesswoman faces jail after huge UK crypto seizure
-
Markets boosted by hopes for deal to end US shutdown
-
Amazon poised to host toughest climate talks in years
-
Ex-jihadist Syrian president due at White House for landmark talks
-
Saudi belly dancers break taboos behind closed doors
-
The AI revolution has a power problem
-
Big lips and botox: In Trump's world, fashion and makeup get political
-
NBA champion Thunder rally to down Grizzlies
Trauma of Greenland's forced contraception
"I had to spread my legs, and when it was put in it hurt terribly," said Britta Mortensen, who was 15 she when was forced to have a coil, or intrauterine device (IUD), fitted.
Like thousands of young Greenland Inuit, she was the victim of a policy to limit the birth rate in the Arctic territory, which was no longer a colony at the time but still under Danish control.
According to an investigation by Denmark's public broadcaster DR, some 4,500 women were subjected to the procedure.
It was 1974 and Mortensen had just left her family for the first time.
There was no high school in the fishing village of Ilulissat where she lived on the island's western edge, so continuing her studies in Denmark was an opportunity for her.
"I went... to a boarding school and there the headmistress told me: 'You have to get an IUD.' I said no," she recalled, standing in front of the white house where she was born.
The headmistress said: "'Yes, you will get an IUD, even if you say no,'" Mortensen added, the hurt still clear.
Her parents, who were thousands of miles away, were never asked for consent and never informed.
One autumn day, the teenager found herself in front of a doctor ready to have the contraceptive device inserted.
"It was an IUD for women who had already had children, not for young girls the age I was," the now 63-year-old told AFP.
- 'Ashamed' -
After the "violation", Mortensen took refuge in silence, unaware that her fate was shared by other Greenlandic girls in her boarding school in Jutland in western Denmark.
"I was ashamed. I haven't told anyone about it until now."
But Mortensen is now taking part in a debate about what about happened -- albeit timidly and mostly on Facebook, where a group set up by a psychologist who was also a victim, has brought together more than 70 women.
It's a "mutual support group as co-sisters so no one feels alone, especially with the reactivation in the trauma that was repressed for many years," said its creator Naja Lyberth.
It is particularly trying for women who had not been able to have children, she said.
Many women were unaware that they were wearing a contraceptive device, she added, only finding out when Greenlandic gynaecologists started discovering them.
"Typically, it was placed during an abortion, without women being informed about it," Lyberth told AFP.
Historian Soren Rud said the Danish campaign in the late 1960s was part of a lingering colonial mentality that continued even after formal decolonisation in 1953.
This attitude "was marked by ideas of the Greenlander's lack of cultural competences. In contrast to many forms of birth control, IUD did not require any effort from the Greenlandic women in order to be effective," said the associate professor at the University of Copenhagen.
The women's testimonies come at a time when Denmark and Greenland, which became an autonomous territory in 2009, are re-examining their past relationship.
In March, Denmark apologised and paid compensation to six Inuit who were taken from their families in the 1950s to take part in an experiment to build a Danish-speaking elite in the Arctic territory.
Britta Mortensen believes that women who were forced to use contraception also deserve an apology and should also be compensated.
"They should compensate for the harm done to us, the many girls who were forced to wear the IUD," she said.
D.Moore--AMWN