Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada, Denmark Should Turn Hans Island Into A Condominium: Academics

IANS, 12 Nov, 2015 12:34 PM
    Arctic experts from Canada and Denmark are proposing a novel solution to who controls an ice-bound speck of an island midway between the two countries.
     
    Turn Hans Island into a condominium.
     
    "It would resolve a long-standing dispute that, although insignificant, has some small potential to cause friction in the future," said Michael Byers, a University of British Columbia international law professor.
     
    On Thursday, Byers and a Danish colleague are to present a proposal suggesting that Canada and Denmark share sovereignty over the 1.2-square-kilometre pimple of rock that protrudes from the Kennedy Channel between Ellesmere Island and Greenland.  
     
    Like a residential building where control is shared among the people who live there, the two countries could decide to co-manage Hans Island.
     
    They could hand off day-to-day management of the disputed land to Inuit from Nunavut and Greenland. Or they could declare the whole thing a park, based on the model of the Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park linking Alberta and Montana.
     
    There are precedents.
     
    France and Spain have shared control over an island in the middle of the Bidasoa River since 1659. Pheasant Island is managed by municipalities on both shores.
     
    Control over Hans Island has no impact on rights to any resources, all of which are determined by other treaties, said Byers. Going condo would simply remove Hans Island from a list of irritants, however minor, between Canada and its Arctic neighbours.
     
    "There have been tensions in the Arctic in some issues," Byers said Wednesday from Denmark. "The new federal government might see this as a way to signal a change in approach."
     
    Denmark's foreign minister has already seen the proposal, Byers said.
     
    "I'm confident he's willing to explore the possibility."
     
    Currently, Canada and Denmark agree to disagree on who owns Hans Island. There have been reports over the years about talks and willingness to move, but nothing has changed.
     
    The militaries of both countries periodically visit to remove the other guy's flag and leave a bottle of Danish schnapps or Canadian whisky. Under the terms of a 2005 agreement, both countries have agreed to inform the other before they visit.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Funeral Today For Ken Taylor, Ex-Diplomat In Iran During Hostage Crisis

    Funeral Today For Ken Taylor, Ex-Diplomat In Iran During Hostage Crisis
    TORONTO — A funeral is to be held today in Toronto for Canada's former ambassador to Iran, Ken Taylor.

    Funeral Today For Ken Taylor, Ex-Diplomat In Iran During Hostage Crisis

    Candice Bergen Adds Name To Conservative Interim Leadership Contest

    Candice Bergen Adds Name To Conservative Interim Leadership Contest
    OTTAWA — Manitoba Conservative Candice Bergen is joining the race for interim leadership of the Conservative party.

    Candice Bergen Adds Name To Conservative Interim Leadership Contest

    Father And Son Among British Deaths In Sinking Of Tofino Whale-Watching Boat

    Father And Son Among British Deaths In Sinking Of Tofino Whale-Watching Boat
    British media reports have identified a father and his teenaged son as two of the five Britons who died after a whale-watching boat sank off the west coast of Vancouver Island.

    Father And Son Among British Deaths In Sinking Of Tofino Whale-Watching Boat

    Cattlemen's Group Says No Reason To Stop Eating Meat In Moderation

    Cattlemen's Group Says No Reason To Stop Eating Meat In Moderation
    CALGARY — The Canadian Cattlemen's Association says there are many theories why red and processed meat may be linked to cancer, but no scientific consensus has been reached.

    Cattlemen's Group Says No Reason To Stop Eating Meat In Moderation

    Fate Of Heart-Wrenching Residential School Abuse Stories Hangs In Balance

    Fate Of Heart-Wrenching Residential School Abuse Stories Hangs In Balance
    On one side of the two-day hearing are those who argue a lower court judge was right to order the material destroyed in due course. On the other are those who believe it should be kept in perpetuity under appropriate lock and key.

    Fate Of Heart-Wrenching Residential School Abuse Stories Hangs In Balance

    Psychiatrist Tells Guy Turcotte's Trial He Was Anxious, Suicidal After Arrest

    The first psychiatrist to see Guy Turcotte after his arrest and transfer to a mental hospital in 2009 says he diagnosed him with an anxiety adjustment disorder and says he was in a suicidal state.

    Psychiatrist Tells Guy Turcotte's Trial He Was Anxious, Suicidal After Arrest