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  • Greenlanders express fear and indignation as Trump eyes territory

    Greenlanders express fear and indignation as Trump eyes territory


    Gabriela Pomeroy,

    Alicia Curryand

    Adrienne Murray,in Copenhagen

    Mia Chemnitz Mia ChemnitzMia Chemnitz

    Mia Chemnitz says “the people of Greenland do not want to become American”

    “The people of Greenland do not want to become American,” Mia Chemnitz tells the BBC. “We are not for sale.”

    The 32-year-old business owner in the Greenlandic capital Nuuk reflects the sentiments of many who spoke to the BBC about how they felt about recent rhetoric from the Trump administration.

    The White House has said it was “actively” discussing an offer to buy the territory that has for centuries belonged to Denmark. US President Donald Trump and his officials had earlier intimated a willingness to take it by force if necessary.

    This has been met with nervousness and opprobrium among Greenlanders – both on the world’s largest island and elsewhere.

    This nervousness has only grown since the US took Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro from his residence in Caracas to New York on drug-trafficking and narco-terrorism charges in an unprecedented military move.

    Almost immediately after, the wife of a senior White House staffer indicated that Greenland was next.

    “That’s when it stopped feeling abstract,” says Tupaarnaq Kopeck, 40, who moved to Canada – another place Trump has threatened to annex – for family and work.

    “For the first time, I contacted my sister in Greenland and told her that if the unthinkable ever became reality, they would have a place to stay with us.”

    Aaja Chemnitz, one of two MPs in the Danish parliament representing Greenland, says the comments from the Trump administration are “a clear threat” that she was “appalled” by.

    “It’s completely disrespectful from the US side to not rule out annexing our country and to annex another Nato ally,” she says.

    Tupaarnaq Kopeck Tupaarnaq Kopeck Tupaarnaq Kopeck

    Tupaarnaq Kopeck says the military intervention in Venezuela made the abstract feel real

    Greenland is the world’s most sparsely populated territory. With much of the Arctic island covered by ice, most of the population lives in Nuuk and the surrounding south-western coastline.

    But it is strategically significant to the US – which is why it has had a military presence there since World War 2.

    Greenland’s location between North America and the Arctic makes it well placed for early warning systems in the event of missile attacks.

    More recently, there has also been increased interest in Greenland’s natural resources, including rare earth minerals, which are becoming easier to access as its ice melts due to climate change.

    “It’s not fun being 56,000 people and having these threats – if you can call them that – from a giant like the US,” says Masaana Egede, Editor in Chief from Greenlandic newspaper Sermitsiaq.

    “The citizens of Greenland are nervous about this, because this is not something that we take lightly.”

    Experts generally agree that a military takeover of Greenland would be an easy undertaking for the US – but that the geopolitical fallout would effectively end the Nato alliance.

    After the issue of Greenland’s ownership was raised anew by the White House, six European allies issued a statement saying Greenland’s future should be decided by its people – something Mia says she is grateful for.

    But she worries this will matter little to the US “if it’s not backed with consequences and actions”.

    “As a Greenlander, I can’t help but wonder: what are we worth to these allies? To what lengths are they willing to go to protect us?”

    Tupaarnaq says: “Respect is about more than alliances on paper. When powerful nations talk about you instead of with you, that respect disappears very quickly.”

    Aleqatsiaq Peary Aleqatsiaq Peary, a 42-year-old Inuit hunter, infront of a boatAleqatsiaq Peary

    Aleqatsiaq Peary, a 42-year-old Inuit hunter says a US takeover would just “replace one occupier with another”

    The Trump administration has stressed its intention was to buy Greenland from Denmark – despite Copenhagen reiterating the territory was not for sale – while retaining a military intervention as an option.

    Aaja sees annexation by force as unlikely – instead, “what we are going to see is that they will put pressure on us in order to make sure that they will take over Greenland over time”.

    Polling consistently shows that Greenlanders generally favour eventual independence from Denmark but oppose being owned by the US. The territory is largely self-governing, with control of foreign affairs and defence retained by Copenhagen.

    This is perhaps why Aleqatsiaq Peary, a 42-year-old Inuit hunter living in the remote northerly town of Qaanaaq, seemed unfazed by the prospect of US ownership.

    “It would be switching from one master to another, from one occupier to another,” he says. “We are a colony under Denmark. We are already losing a lot from being under the Danish government.”

    But he says: “I don’t have time for Trump. Our people are in need,” explaining hunters like him hunt with dogs on the sea ice and fish, “but the sea ice is melting and hunters cannot make a living anymore”.

    For Sermitsiaq editor Masaana, the rhetoric from the US is pushing a fallacious binary choice.

    “We really have to try to avoid getting the story going to a place where it’s Greenland that has to decide between the US and Denmark, because that is not the choice that the Greenlandic people want.”

    Christian Keldsen Christian KeldsenChristian Keldsen

    Christian Keldsen says “people in Greenland are getting really irritated with this”

    For others, who see the strong relationship Greenland already has with the US being soured, there is a clear sense of indignation.

    “People in Greenland are getting really irritated with this,” says Christian Keldsen of the Greenland Business Association.

    “Greenlanders are welcoming and open-hearted, it’s the best thing about the country. But now with this, some people are scared.”

    Greenland is open for business with the US, Christian stresses, noting that there are new direct flights from Greenland to New York – a sure sign “they don’t need to take us over”.

    “We are a well-functioning democracy and our government has a strong mandate,” Mia says. “We are a Nato ally and the US has had military bases in Greenland for over 70 years and still has the right to establish and run new and more.

    “As it has been stated from Greenland before: we are not for sale, but we’re open for business.”



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  • Thousands flee clashes between Syrian government and Kurdish fighters

    Thousands flee clashes between Syrian government and Kurdish fighters


    Getty Images  A child reacts as residents flee Aleppo's Ashrafieh neighbourhood on January 7, 2026. Getty Images

    Thousands of residents fled the Ashrafieh neighbourhood of Aleppo on Wednesday

    At least 12 people have reportedly been killed during two days of intense clashes between Syrian government and Kurdish fighters in the northern city of Aleppo.

    Tens of thousands of civilians have also fled the Kurdish majority neighbourhoods of Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh, which the Syrian army shelled on Wednesday afternoon after designating them as “closed military areas”.

    The government said the operation was a response to attacks by armed groups in the areas and was “solely aimed at preserving security”.

    The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) militia alliance – which insists it has no military presence in Aleppo – called it a “criminal attempt” to forcibly displace residents.

    One Aleppo resident told the BBC on Wednesday that the situation was “terrible and awful”.

    “All my friends have left for other towns. Sometimes it is calm and suddenly war starts again,” they said.

    A displaced man from Ashrafieh, Samer Issa, told Reuters news agency that he was sleeping in a mosque which had been turned into a shelter with his young children.

    “The shelling intensified. We left because our children could no longer endure the hits and the shelling,” he said, describing the situation as “heartbreaking”.

    Getty Images This photo taken on on January 7, 2026 shows security forces deployed near Aleppo's Sheikh Maqsud and Ashrafieh neighbourhoodsGetty Images

    Syrian government forces deployed near Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh

    The violence underscores the challenges facing the government of President Ahmad al-Sharaa in a country that remains deeply divided a year after he led the rebel offensive that overthrew Bashar al-Assad.

    In March 2025, the Kurdish-led SDF, which controls much of Syria’s north-east and has tens of thousands of fighters, signed a deal to integrate all military and civilian institutions into the Syrian state.

    But that has not happened yet, with both sides accusing each other of trying to derail the agreement.

    The SDF remains reluctant to give up the autonomy it won during the country’s 13-year civil war, when it helped US-led forces defeat the Islamic State (IS) group.

    The stand-off in Aleppo also risks dragging in Turkey, which backs the government and considers the Kurdish militia that dominates the SDF as a terrorist organisation.



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  • US seizes two ‘ghost fleet’ tankers linked to Venezuelan oil

    US seizes two ‘ghost fleet’ tankers linked to Venezuelan oil


    The United States says it has seized two tankers linked to Venezuelan oil exports in “back-to-back” operations in the North Atlantic and the Caribbean.

    US forces boarded the Russian-flagged Marinera after a pursuit lasting almost two weeks and as it travelled through the waters between Iceland and Scotland. The British Navy gave logistical support by air and sea.

    A second tanker – the M/T Sophia – was accused by the US of “conducting illicit activities” and boarded in the Caribbean.

    The moves come as the US seeks to choke off most exports of Venezuelan crude oil, and just days after its special forces seized Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in a lighting raid on his residence in Caracas.

    In a post on X, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth wrote: “The blockade of sanctioned and illicit Venezuelan oil remains in FULL EFFECT – anywhere in the world.”

    Moscow has denounced the seizure of the tanker sailing under its flag, and demanded that the US treat Russians on board properly and permits them to return to Russia quickly.

    The transport ministry said it had given the vessel “temporary permission” to use the Russian flag, adding that no state had the right to use force against vessels properly registered in other states’ jurisdictions.

    Reports had suggested that Russia had dispatched a submarine to safeguard the vessel, but it appears that US forces were able to board the tanker without facing any resistance.

    The White House described the ship as a “Venezuelan shadow fleet vessel deemed stateless after flying a false flag and had a judicial order” against it.

    Venezuela’s leadership is co-operating with the US on the second tanker seized in the Caribbean, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said.

    “They understand that the only way they can move oil and generate revenue and not have economic collapse is if they co-operate and work with the United States,” Rubio told reporters.

    Earlier, US President Donald Trump had said that Venezuela – which has the world’s largest oil reserves – “will be turning over” up to 50 million barrels of oil worth some $2.8bn (£2.1bn) to the US.

    Rubio said that the US would sell oil that is in Venezuela “in the marketplace at market rates” and that the US would control how the proceeds were dispersed “in a way that benefits the Venezuelan people”.

    He said the US had a considered plan for the future of Venezuela, and that the administration was “not just winging it”.

    China – the biggest buyer of Venezuelan oil in recent years – has condemned the US moves and accused it of threatening global energy security.

    The seizure of the two tankers was announced by the US military in separate posts on social media on Wednesday.

    The US European Command said the M/V Bella 1 – using the former name of the Marinera – was boarded “for violations of US sanctions”.

    “The vessel was seized in the North Atlantic pursuant to a warrant issued by a US federal court after being tracked by USCGC Munro”, a Coast Guard cutter.

    Britain’s Ministry of Defence said RAF surveillance aircraft and a naval support vessel, the RFA Tideforce, were among the UK military assets that took part in the operation, following a US request for assistance.

    Defence Secretary John Healey said the action was “in full compliance with international law”, and “formed part of global efforts to crack down on sanctions- busting”.

    The vessel has been accused of breaking US sanctions and shipping Iranian oil.

    Images published by Russian state broadcaster RT show a helicopter close to a ship that appears to be the M/V Bella 1.

    The Russian Maritime Register of Shipping shows that the tanker had changed its name to Marinera, and was sailing under the Russian flag. Its home port stated as the southern Russian city of Sochi on the Black Sea.

    The Russian transport ministry said US forces boarded the Marinera at about 15:00 Moscow time (1200 GMT), after which communications with the vessel were lost.

    US officials said that Marinera was falsely flying the flag of Guyana last month, which made it stateless.

    Experts told BBC Verify that the US called the ship Bella 1 as a vessel cannot change its flag during a voyage unless there was a real transfer of ownership or change of registry.

    The experts also said that under UN international maritime law, a stateless vessel can be boarded by authorities.

    Separately, the US Southern Command announced on Wednesday that the defence and homeland security departments “apprehended a stateless, sanctioned dark fleet motor tanker without incident”.

    “The interdicted vessel, M/T Sophia, was operating in international waters and conducting illicit activities in the Caribbean Sea. The US Coast Guard is escorting M/T Sophia to the U.S. for final disposition.”

    The US Southern Command also posted a video showing a helicopter circling over a vessel.

    Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said that “in two predawn operations today, the Coast Guard conducted back-to-back meticulously co-ordinated boarding of two ‘ghost fleet’ tanker ships”.

    She said both seized vessels “were either last docked in Venezuela or en route to it”.



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