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The Greenlandic Red Cross has donated about $8,800 to help people who lost their homes in a fire at the White Row townhouses Sunday in Iqaluit. (Xueying Fan/CBC)
The Greenlandic Red Cross has donated 50,000 Danish kroner — about $8,800 — to help people who lost their homes in a fire Sunday in Iqaluit.

Dozens of people lost everything when 22 units in the complex commonly known as White Row burned to the ground. The money will go to helping those people recover.

A press release from the organization says the Greenlandic Red Cross will be in touch with officials here in Canada, and, if needed, they may send further donations of clothes on a charter flight from Nuuk later this week.


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People in a supermarket observe two minutes of silence in Nuuk, Greenland, at noon on Thursday. Greenland was in mourning Thursday after an eight-year-old girl and two women were bludgeoned to death and two men seriously injured in a remote Inuit village. (Leiff Josefsen/Sermitsiaq/The Associated Press)
Two women and an eight-year-old girl killed, two men injured in remote village

Greenland was in mourning Thursday after an eight-year-old girl and two women were bludgeoned to death and two men seriously injured in a remote Inuit village.

Flags flew at half staff and two minutes of silence were observed across the giant, but sparsely populated island, where violence of that scale is rare.

A 22-year-old man was arrested on preliminary charges, including three counts of murder and four counts of attempted murder, police said.


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Location of Nutaarmiut, Greenland which has a population of abotu 50 people. (Google Maps) CBC.ca
Danish police in Greenland say three people have been killed and two seriously injured in a shooting incident.

Police spokesman Claus Risbjerg says a man has been detained but the motive for the shooting is unclear.

Risbjerg said Wednesday four policemen and medical staff flew from the nearby town of Upernavik to Nutaarmiut, a hamlet in northwestern Greenland with less than 50 inhabitants.


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Nuuk is the capital of Greenland. Fifteen thousand very kind and generous souls who speak English, Danish and Greenlandic, the Inuit dialect there. 87% of the population of Denmark is Inuit. Photo: Marie Wadden
CBC's Marie Wadden travels to Greenland where technology, development, tourism, nationalism and culture are changing fast. Major oil companies are searching for oil and gas off the shores of Greenland and Alaska. And a warming Arctic is presenting opportunities to southerners in the North that make many Inuit uneasy.

"There's a buzz in Nuuk (Greenland)" Wadden observes. "And it's all about the money that can be made." There's also the Greenlandic drive and ambition to become financially independent from Denmark.


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Kathrine Bödker (to the left), Inge Olesen Brandt and Katrine Natanielsen (to the right) of the 8th of March Group. Photo: Gustaf Klarin, SR Science Department.
Women reject the Arctic to a higher degree than men. This applies to Canada, Alaska and the northern parts of Sweden, Norway and Finland, but the greatest shortage of women is in northern Russia and in Greenland. There are just 85 women for every 100 men in Greenland. Among Greenlanders living in Denmark however, the majority are women.

The 8th of March Group works to reduce domestic violence against women.

"During the past 20 to 30 years, women have increasingly abandoned the role of the traditional housewife of the hunting and trapping husband," says Katrine Nathanielsen from the 8th of March Group. "Women are getting educations and making money while men are stagnating."