Greenlanders reject Trump's renewed push for control of island
During a recent kayaking event, Greenlanders voiced strong opposition to President Trump's persistent calls for US control over their island. They emphasized that decisions regarding Greenland's future should reside solely with its own citizens. M...

Speaking at a NATO summit in Turkey's Ankara, Trump this week renewed his demand to gain control of Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory, arguing it was important for U.S. national security.
At the kayaking championships in Nuuk harbour, where competitors performed rolling manoeuvres in the water by flipping their kayaks upside down and back upright, spectators said Trump was focused on the island's natural resources rather than the wishes of its people.
"He only thinks of commodities and oil," said Frederik Larsen, 72, a pensioner born in Greenland. "I think we can manage without him."
Public school teacher Birgithe Geisler, 60, said Greenland belonged to Greenlanders.
Hans David Ezekiassen, an instructor at the Greenland Maritime Center, was more blunt.
"I think it's shit, to put it mildly," he said.
"He can't even control his own country, so why must he try to take over other countries?"
"With Denmark, they're making their way towards full autonomy and the U.S. wouldn't need Greenland as a strategic point if the U.S. was playing nicely with our allies," he said.
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