The Greenlanders have voted. And their message is almost as clear as the one Anders Vistisen, a Danish member of the European Parliament, sent last week: “Mr. Trump, f*** off.” Qulleq ...
The direction that Greenland wants to take will be decided by Greenlanders," he said Denmark's Defence minister Troels Lund Poulsen delivers a joint press conference with his Ukrainian counterpart ...
Opinion poll conducted in late January said 56% of Greenlanders in favour of independence A political poster sits at the side of the road as a woman walks in the snow, in Nuuk, Greenland ...
Greenland is the world's largest island - it's larger even than France, Germany, Spain, United Kingdom, Italy, Greece, Switzerland, and Belgium combined. But despite its size, Greenland remains a ...
Greenland, the world’s largest island, votes on Tuesday to elect its next parliament and government. The thinly populated Danish territory’s elections usually attract only local attention.
For strategic and resource reasons, Greenland looms large in the imagination of President Donald Trump. But geographically, the island doesn't loom quite as large as you might think. Centuries of ...
Greenlanders yesterday shrugged off US President Donald Trump’s vow to take over the Arctic island, seeing it merely as an opportunity to advance their own independence bid. In the quiet ...
NUUK, Greenland — Greenland’s prime minister declared Wednesday that “Greenland is ours” and cannot be taken or bought in defiance of a message from U.S. President Donald Trump ...
In one corner: The world's largest island, 80% of it covered in ice, whose Prime Minister Múte Bourup Egede says the Americans and their leader need to understand that Greenland is not for sale ...
NUUK, Greenland (AP) — Greenland’s prime minister has a message for President Donald Trump: “Greenland is ours.” Múte Bourup Egede made the statement on Facebook Wednesday, just hours ...
By Christian Ulloriaq JeppesenMaya Tekeli and Jeffrey Gettleman Christian Ulloriaq Jeppesen reported from Greenland, Maya Tekeli from Copenhagen and Jeffrey Gettleman from London. March 5 ...
As Greenlanders prepare to head to the polls this week, the United States — and particularly President Trump’s stated interest in acquiring the territory — is looming large over their vote.
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