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Denmark summons US charge d’affaires over alleged attempts to interfere with Greenland’s status – Europe live | World news

Denmark summons US charge d’affaires over alleged attempts to interfere with Greenland’s status

We are getting big news just in from Denmark, which has summoned the US charge d’affaires in the country over alleged attempts to interfere with the status of Greenland, a long-term point of interest for the new US administration of Donald Trump.

In a comment to public broadcaster DR, foreign minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen said that “any attempt to interfere in the Kingdom’s internal affairs will obviously be unacceptable.”

The move comes after DR reported that Danish intelligence services have uncovered a network of “at least three” people working on “influence operations” in Greenland to drive a wedge between Denmark and the territory, in a bid to pave the way for it to get closer to the United States.

The broadcaster said it knew the names of the three American men involved in the operations, but chose not to publish them to protect sources. It said they were previously known to be close to Trump, but it was not immediately clear if they worked on the White House’s order or on their own.

It alleged that one of the men visited Greenland to attend meetings and compile a list of potential allies and opponents of Donald Trump’s plans to take over the territory.

He also allegedly urged Greenlanders to “point out cases that could be used to put Denmark in a bad light in American media,” DR said.

The two other men were allegedly involved in building networks of contacts with politicians, business figures and community leaders to pursue Trump’s plans.

The meeting with the US charge d’affaires is expected later today, Rasmussen said.

In May, Wall Street Journal also reported that the US stepped up its intelligence operations to spy on Greenland, also prompting Rasmussen to summon US envoy for a chat.

A Greenlandic parliamentarian, Aaja Chemnitz, told DR that it was unacceptable to “try to infiltrate Greenlandic society in this way,” insisting that “it is Greenland itself that must decide what we want and what kind of future we want.”

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Denmark’s Frederiksen says US spying allegations are ‘unacceptable’

Back in Denmark, the country’s prime minister Mette Frederiksen has spoken with a delegation of US Senate representatives this morning, telling them the alleged interference with Danish and Greenlandic issues (10:03) was “unacceptable.”

She added that the report highlighted the seriousness of the US president Donald Trump’s interest in Greenland, DR reported.

Separately, Frederiksen has apologised to more than 4,500 Greenlandic victims of Denmark’s forced contraception campaign aimed at reducing the Inuit birth rate.

AFP explained that from the 1960s until 1992, Danish authorities forced about half of the island’s 9,000 fertile Inuit women to wear a contraceptive coil – or intrauterine device (IUD) – without their or their family’s consent.

“We cannot change what has happened. But we can take responsibility. Therefore, on behalf of Denmark, I would like to say: I am sorry,” Frederiksen said in a statement.

Greenland’s prime minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen also apologised in the same statement for the cases that occurred under Greenland’s control, AFP noted.

Curiously, the issue is believed to have been identified by three American operatives as one that could be exploited further to drive Denmark and Greenland apart, according to DR investigation published earlier today.

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