Arctic Crime and Punishment

Arctic Crime and Punishment Arctic Crime and Punishment

Illulissat, Greenland. A frontier town 250 miles north of the Arctic Circle. A community of hunters and fishermen with five regular policemen, one amateur judge and a very high incidence of violent crime. Naalu Jeremiassen, a mother of four, and Jens Reimer, a hunter, both find themselves in police detention. She has killed her husband. He has punched and kicked his wife to within an inch of her life. Neither can remember exactly what happened...

Arctic Crime sets an intimate exploration of their cases in the context of a hunter-gatherer society whose notion of justice and punishment is extremely tolerant, but whose very way of life is collapsing in the face of 'progress'. This spirit of rehabilitation and forgiveness has been written into Greenland's criminal law. In it's judgement of Naalu and Jens, the court will be obliged to consider their circumstances above their crimes.

The majority of Greenland's violence is by men on women. The men are deeply frustrated because in less than a generation, they have left behind the hunter-gatherer society of their ancestors and become mostly wage-paid. But does this alienation from their traditions excuse acts of violence? And should men be punished for them in the With the co-operation of the local police, the film makes it's own investigation into 'mitigating circumstances'.

Greenland operates a system of open prisons where inmates are free to work in the community during the day and are locked up at night, but lately it has come under pressure from the Danish high court to modernise.

It is Naalu's case and her complex personality that come to dominate the story. By coming to an understanding of what a murder in the family feels like, both for the perpetrator and for those left behind, and of why it might have happened,

"There's a lot of violence within partnerships and marriages," says local chief of police Bernt Heiselberg, "and most of it is not reported. People tend not to interfere." But his men are called out to investigate a murder. Naalu Jeremiassen, a mother of four, has stabbed her 32-year-old husband and his body is lying on the kitchen floor. In a separate incident, Jens Reimer, a hunter, inflicts serious head and internal injuries on his wife in a brutal drunken beating.

Jens Reimer, the wife-beater, hopes he will be judged by the old system of rehabilitation: "The most important thing is for me to be able to hunt," he says. "That's how I've been raised. That's the way of my forefathers." Reimer fits the profile built up by the Ilulissat police of the 'typical' violent criminal: he's in his early 30s, he was under the influence of alcohol and his act of violence was towards someone he knows.

Naalu's dead husband also fitted this profile. She had reported violence before, but never pursued it once the police arrived for the children's sake. "I think my husband's way of thinking was the traditional one," she says. The fate of both is in the hands of Greenland's unique system of justice.

Made in co-production with Angel Productions

Press:

"Beautifully shot, intelligent, atmospheric and completely unsensationalised." -Digital Choice

"Quietly sensational." -Radio Times

"A fascinating, real-life glimpse into a culture very different from our own." -Daily Mail Weekend Magazine

"Quietly engrossing." -The Sunday Times

"...This was one of those gripping documentaries that takes us into an entirely foreign world and is wisely content to leave us without any pat answers to the questions raised." -James Walton, The Daily Telegraph

A Diverse Production Ltd Production