After tsunami, Greenland’s national day, June 21, turns mournful
"The worst thing that could happen—that the tsunami would cost the loss of life"
21
June, 2017
To
understand the devastation caused by the June 18 tsunami in
Greenland, you can consider this photo of a house from Nuugaatisiaq,
where 11 houses were swept into the sea, from by the Arctic Joint
Command which visited the
village
this week.
A house, battered by the June 18 tsunami, and a lone boot: one of the sad scenes photographed in Nuugaatsiaq this week by the Arctic Joint Command.
This photo from the Arctic Joint Command shows a slope, not far from that which tumbled into the sea about 30 kilometres from Nuugaatsiaq, triggering a tsunami June 18, that could also collapse at some point into the water.
June
21, National Day in Greenland, is usually a day for celebrating the
island’s home rule government, but this year, people are still in
shock over
last weekend’s tsunami.
With
eyewitness reports that, on June 18, three adults and a child were
pulled into the sea when the tsunami poured into their village of
Nuugaatsiaq, and the June 20 confirmation that they are “presumed
dead,” Greenland’s national day will be a day of mourning, with
the red-and-white flags flown at half-mast around the island.
June
21 will be an occasion “to show our grief and condolences for the
lives lost in the flood,” Prime Minister Kim Kielsen said June 20.
His
statement came shortly after Greenland police said the four, missing
since June 18, are “now presumed dead after the tsunami in
Nuugaatsiaq.”
“This
is the worst thing that could happen—that the tsunami would cost
the loss of life,” Kielsen said in the release in which he also
offered condolences to the grieving families and thanked everyone who
had responded to the emergency on the northwestern coast of
Greenland.
Stories
from people in Nuugaatsiaq, as well as from the first responders on
the ground, are now surfacing in Greenland’s newspaper,Sermitsiaq
AG.
Ivik
Cortzen, 25, of Nuugaatsiaq, who was on her cellphone when the
tsunami first hit, watched as waves started to come into the
community of about 100.
“The
third time the water swelled, I ran out [of the house] and started to
run, but I had forgotten my jacket, and hurried back to fetch it.
When I went outside once again, the stairs were gone, but fortunately
I could step on some ice and some wood, and I jumped toward the
ground and started running for the hills,” Cortzen told Sermitsiaq.
Malik
Nieman, an experienced helicopter pilot, who landed in Nuugaatsiaq
from Uummannaq within hours after the tsunami struck about midnight
June 18 to start the rescue operation, said the scene there “was
the most horrible I have ever seen.
“It
was unreal, almost like in a horror movie.”
Thanks
to videos taken by some in Nuugaatsiaq, you can now watch the frothy
and ice-filled water rising from the sea and spreading on the land,
as in this
video shared
on YouTube.
On
June 18, pilot Nieman flew into and out of the community for 10
hours, bringing the injured and others to safety.
Since
then, the Arctic Joint Command has returned to Nuugaatsiaq to
evaluate the extensive damage, feed sled dogs left behind and
re-start generators in an effort to get telecommunications running
again in the hard-hit area.
The
Uummannaq fiord remained under a tsumani threat this week, with
officials reporting other weak portions of the cliffs around the
fiord, which were spotted during aerial surveys.
Meanwhile,
experts have become increasingly convinced that a huge landslide,
whose vibrations registered 1,500 kilometres away, was responsible
for the tsunami, rather than an earthquake.
That’s
in part because there were no aftershocks—as was the case this
past January when an earthquake,
followed by aftershocks, shook northern Baffin island and the High
Arctic.
Some
have suggested the landslide which caused the June 18 tsunami could
have been be due to erosion, precipitation or changing sea currents
and water levels, all of which can create conditions for land
slippage.
Relief
efforts to those affected by the tsunami continue, with large
donations from Iceland and the Faroe Islands, a commitment of
continuing aid from Denmark, personal and corporate contributions,
help from the Red Cross and fundraisers, including a concert planned
for next weekend in Nuuk.
If
you want to make a donation to the relief effort underway in
Greenland, you can make a bank transfer, using the following
information:
Bank
of Greenland
Imaneq 33 P. O. Box 1033
Nuuk 3900, Greenland
Account no.: 6471-1570134
SWIFT: GRENGLGX
IBAN: GL8764710001570134
Imaneq 33 P. O. Box 1033
Nuuk 3900, Greenland
Account no.: 6471-1570134
SWIFT: GRENGLGX
IBAN: GL8764710001570134
Donations are loaded for delivery June 20 for those who lost everything in the June 18 tsunami in Greenland and the resulting evacuation of villages: Air Greenland in Kangerlussuaq collected 30 boxes of clothes and shoes along with coffee and other dry goods, which were loaded on to a Hercules for delivery to Uummannaq. (PHOTO/ ARCTIC JOINT COMMAND)
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