COPENHAGEN, Nov 29 (Reuters) - Greenland's ruling Siumut
Party retained a slim majority in a snap election called after
an expenses scandal, according to results issued early on
Saturday, but its new leader Kim Kielsen will need to build a
coalition to form a government.
Siumut, which has formed every single government in
Greenland but one since 1979, won 34.3 percent of the vote.
Opposition party Inuit Ataqatigiit, led by Sara Olsvig, won 33.2
percent, Greenland's official election website showed.
Although both parties won the same amount of seats in
parliament - 11 each out of a total of 31 - Kielsen is expected
to lead coalition negotiations as his party received more votes.
Greenland, whose capital Nuuk is closer to New York than
Copenhagen, became a Danish colony in the early 19th century but
has been gaining its own powers since World War Two, introducing
a parliament in 1979 and self-governance in 2009.
A Siumut-led government may comfort the few foreign
investors who have ventured into Greenland to develop mining.
The party lifted a ban on uranium mining, opening the door to
rare earth projects which often generate uranium as a byproduct.
Inuit Ataqatigiit had vehemently opposed the lifting of the
ban and had promised to reinstate it, although the party was
keen to emphasise it was not against mining per se.
Greenland's vast mineral and oil potential could form the
foundation for complete independence from Denmark. But projects
are in limbo due to low commodity prices, uncertainty over
regulations, as well as the sheer difficulty of dealing with
Greenland's isolation and lack of infrastructure.
ID:nL2N0TH13E ID:nL2N0TG0G9
(Reporting by Sabina Zawadzki; Editing by Pravin Char)
((sabina.zawadzki@thomsonreuters.com; +45 33 96 96 50, +45 20
54 86 88;))
Keywords: GREENLAND ELECTION/