Greenland, Donald Trump
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Thousands marched in the capitals of Greenland and Denmark, united in their rejection of Donald Trump's expansionist ambitions for the Inuit island.
There is "no such thing as a better colonizer" the leader of the Inuit Circumpolar Council in Greenland said on Friday as she responded to U.S.
The former president of the Inuit Circumpolar Council criticizes Trump’s push to control the island and is demands international support: ‘If they do this to us, who will be next?’
Pedersen, Soren Jeppesen and Stine Jacobsen COPENHAGEN, Jan 15 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump has renewed his ambition to take control of Greenland for national security reasons and questioned whether Denmark has any legal right to the Arctic island.
Some 17,000 thousand Greenlanders live in Denmark, equivalent to about a third of their native island's population. Amid nationwide rallies in support of Greenland's sovereignty against Donald Trump's ambitions,
Inuit advocacy groups, as well as Greenlanders who live in Canada, are emphatically opposed to American designs on their homeland. And, they say, they're tired of being used as geopolitical chess pieces by powerful people in faraway capitals.
Year of Greenland’s tensions continues as circumpolar Inuit wait to find out whether will Donald Trump will carry out invasion threats
A bipartisan U.S. congressional delegation is seeking to reassure Denmark and Greenland after President Donald Trump threatened tariffs if nations don’t support a U.S. takeover of Greenland.