| From: [email protected] (Rene' Seindal)
Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic
Subject: Re: What we have in common
Date: 4 Apr 91 14:21:46 GMT
Sender: [email protected] (Netnews System)
Organization: Department of Computer Science, U of Copenhagen
There are about 50.000 souls on the Faroe Islands, and they have a very
weak economy. You are right in that it is the more expensive things
that are takes care of by the danes, but it is also the things the
Faroe Islands cannot afford to handle themselves.
I have written this before: most, if not all, the faroese I have known,
which are quite a few, as they come to Copenhagen to study, want
complete independence for the Faroe Islands, but also state that it is
unrealistic. A society of 50.000 with a close to subsistance economy
is not enough to build a modern society on. How would a university in
Torshavn work? How many students would it have in each department?
Half of them would have to go abroard anyway, which means Copenhagen or
London. The rest wouldn't be enough to run a university, the lot
wouldn't be so either.
I think most faroese are quite content being Her Royal Majestys
subjects, because it keeps their society and the faroese way of life
alive. They do not pay for the sevices they get from Denmark, so being
a part of the danish kingdom is to their benefit.
Even though the Faroe Islands are under the Queens rule, they are not a
part of Denmark, as a state. The Faroe Islands are not a part of the
EEc, neither is Greenland.
The danish state provides the services for the Faroe Islands they
cannot afford themselves, they are charged nothing more than the rest
of us (state taxes), and they have a lot of freedom to manage their own
affairs. If you look at what they get from Denmark, it is the things
that extends outside the Faroe Islands themselves, not the things that
govern the faroese's everyday life.
In most internal affairs they have their own laws, and most Danish laws
covering Danish affairs do not cover the Faroe Islands or Greenland.
The Faroe Islands are NOT being treated as a colony, it is a mutual
relationship that benefits both parties, in different ways, which is
why there are so few conflicts. It has not always been so, though.
Rene' Seindal ([email protected])
|
| Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic
From: [email protected] (Jyrki Kuoppala)
Subject: CIA World Factbook 1991 on nordic countries
Sender: [email protected] (Usenet pseudouser id)
Organization: Helsinki University of Technology, Finland
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 1992 14:41:44 GMT
Copied from the gopher server tree, definitions for terms available
there.
Faroe Islands
(part of the Danish realm)
------------ Geography
Total area: 1,400 km2; land area: 1,400 km2
Comparative area: slightly less than eight times the size of
Washington, DC
Land boundaries: none
Coastline: 764 km
Maritime claims:
Exclusive fishing zone: 200 nm;
Territorial sea: 3 nm
Climate: mild winters, cool summers; usually overcast; foggy, windy
Terrain: rugged, rocky, some low peaks; cliffs along most of coast
Natural resources: fish
Land use: arable land 2%; permanent crops 0%; meadows and pastures
0%; forest and woodland 0%; other 98%
Environment: precipitous terrain limits habitation to small coastal
lowlands; archipelago of 18 inhabited islands and a few uninhabited
islets
Note: strategically located along important sea lanes in
northeastern Atlantic about midway between Iceland and Shetland Islands
------------ People
Population: 48,151 (July 1991), growth rate 0.9% (1991)
Birth rate: 17 births/1,000 population (1991)
Death rate: 8 deaths/1,000 population (1991)
Net migration rate: 0 migrants/1,000 population (1991)
Infant mortality rate: 9 deaths/1,000 live births (1991)
Life expectancy at birth: 75 years male, 81 years female (1991)
Total fertility rate: 2.2 children born/woman (1991)
Nationality: noun--Faroese (sing., pl.); adjective--Faroese
Ethnic divisions: homogeneous Scandinavian population
Religion: Evangelical Lutheran
Language: Faroese (derived from Old Norse), Danish
Labor force: 17,585; largely engaged in fishing, manufacturing,
transportation, and commerce
------------ Government
Long-form name: none
Type: part of the Danish realm; self-governing overseas
administrative division of Denmark
Capital: Torshavn
Administrative divisions: none (self-governing overseas
administrative division of Denmark)
Independence: part of the Danish realm; self-governing overseas
administrative division of Denmark
Constitution: Danish
Legal system: Danish
National holiday: Birthday of the Queen, 16 April (1940)
Executive branch: Danish monarch, high commissioner, prime
minister, deputy prime minister, Cabinet (Landsstyri)
Legislative branch: unicameral Parliament (Logting)
Judicial branch: none
Leaders:
Chief of State--Queen MARGRETHE II (since 14 January 1972),
represented by High Commissioner Bent KLINTE (since NA);
Head of Government--Prime Minister Atli P. DAM (since 15
January 1991)
Political parties and leaders:
two-party ruling coalition--Social Democratic Party, Atli P. DAM;
People's Party, Jogvan SUNDSTEIN;
opposition--Cooperation Coalition Party, Pauli ELLEFSEN;
Republican Party, Signer HANSEN;
Progressive and Fishing Industry Party-Christian People's Party
(PFIP-CPP), leader NA; Progress Party, leader NA; Home Rule Party, Hilmar
KASS
Suffrage: universal at age 20
Elections:
Faroese Parliament--last held 17 November 1990 (next to be held
November 1994); results--Social Democratic 27.4%, People's Party 21.9%,
Cooperation Coalition Party 18.9%, Republican Party 14.7%, Home Rule
8.8%, PFIP-CPP 5.9%, other 2.4%;
seats--(32 total) two-party coalition 17 (Social Democratic 10, People's
Party 7), Cooperation Coalition Party 6, Republican Party 4,
Home Rule 3, PFIP-CPP 2;
Danish Parliament--last held on 12 December 1990 (next to be
held by December 1994);
results--percent of vote by party NA;
seats--(2 total) Social Democratic 1, People's Party 1; note--the
Faroe Islands elects two representatives to the Danish Parliament
Communists: insignificant number
Member of:
Diplomatic representation: none (self-governing overseas
administrative division of Denmark)
Flag: white with a red cross outlined in blue that extends to the
edges of the flag; the vertical part of the cross is shifted to the
hoist side in the style of the Dannebrog (Danish flag)
------------ Economy
Overview: The Faroese, who have long been enjoying the affluent living
standards of the Danes and other Scandinavians, now must cope with the
decline of the all-important fishing industry and with an external debt
twice the size of annual income. When the nations of the world extended
their fishing zones to 200 nautical miles in the early 1970s, the
Faroese no longer could continue their traditional long-distance
fishing and subsequently depleted their own nearby fishing areas; one
estimate foresaw a 25% drop in fish catch in 1990 alone. Half the
fishing fleet is for sale, and the 22 fish-processing plants work at
only half capacity. The government no longer can maintain its high
level of spending on roads and tunnels, hospitals, sports facilities,
and other social welfare programs.
GDP: $662 million, per capita $14,000; real growth rate 3%
(1989 est.)
Inflation rate (consumer prices): 2.0% (1988)
Unemployment rate: NA%, but increasing
Budget: revenues $442 million; expenditures $442 million, including
capital expenditures of NA (1989)
Exports: $343 million (f.o.b., 1989 est.);
commodities--fish and fish products 88%, animal feedstuffs,
transport equipment;
partners--Denmark 16%, UK 14%, FRG 13.4%, US 10%, France 9%,
Japan 5%
Imports: $344 million (c.i.f., 1989 est.);
commodities--machinery and transport equipment 30%,
manufactures 16%, food and livestock 15%, chemicals 6%, fuels 4%;
partners: Denmark 44%, Norway 16%, FRG 6%, Sweden 6%, US 3%
External debt: $1.3 billion (1989)
Electricity: 80,000 kW capacity; 280 million kWh produced,
5,910 kWh per capita (1989)
Industries: fishing, shipbuilding, handicrafts
Agriculture: accounts for 27% of GDP and employs 27% of labor
force; principal crops--potatoes and vegetables; livestock--sheep; annual
fish catch about 360,000 metric tons
Economic aid: none
Currency: Danish krone (plural--kroner); 1 Danish krone
(DKr) = 100 ore
Exchange rates: Danish kroner (DKr) per US$1--5.817 (January
1991), 6.189 (1990), 7.310 (1989), 6.732 (1988), 6.840 (1987), 8.091
(1986), 10.596 (1985)
Fiscal year: 1 April-31 March
------------ Communications
Highways: 200 km
Ports: Torshavn, Tvoroyri
Merchant marine: 7 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 17,249
GRT/11,887 DWT; includes 1 short-sea passenger, 2 cargo, 2
roll-on/roll-off cargo, 2 refrigerated cargo; note--a subset of the
Danish register
Airports: 1 with permanent surface runway 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: good international communications; fair
domestic facilities; 27,900 telephones; stations--1 AM, 3 (10 repeaters)
FM, 3 (29 repeaters) TV; 3 coaxial submarine cables
------------ Defense Forces
Branches: no organized native military forces; only a small
Police Force is maintained
Note: defense is the responsibility of Denmark
|