N Korea’s Kim oversees hypersonic missile tests, cites geopolitical crisis

Denmark PM urges Trump to stop ‘threatening’ Greenland

Mette Frederiksen, the prime minister of Denmark, has urged US President Donald Trump to halt his threat to annex Greenland after Washington abducted the country’s leader.

“It makes absolutely no sense to talk about the US needing to conquer Greenland. In a statement released on Sunday, Frederiksen said, “The US has no right to annex any of the three countries in the Danish Kingdom.”

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Trump said in an interview that was released by The Atlantic magazine that “we absolutely need Greenland.” For defense, we require it.

Concerned in Denmark that the same thing might happen with Greenland, a Danish territory, on Saturday, the United States bombed Venezuela and toppled President Nicolas Maduro.

Therefore, I urge the US to halt threats made against a historically close ally, another nation, and other individuals who have vehemently stated that their properties are not for sale, Frederiksen said.

Trump’s most recent remarks were not immediately addressed by the Greenlandic prime minister’s office.

Greenland, a self-governing Danish territory and NATO member, has been repeatedly requested by the US president.

The Trump administration appointed Jeff Landry, the governor of Louisiana and who has a strong anti-annexation support, as special representative to the mineral-rich Arctic Island last month.

Given that the US hopes to reduce its reliance on Chinese exports, Greenland’s strategic location between Europe and North America makes it a significant hub for its ballistic missile defense system.

On her X feed, Katie Miller, the wife of Trump’s deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, posted the contentious image of the Danish autonomous territory in the US flag’s colors on Saturday.

A single word accompanied her post: “SOON.”

Stephen Miller, who helped to steer Trump’s hardline immigration and domestic agenda, is widely recognized as the architect of many of his policies.

Jens-Frederik Nielsen, the prime minister of Greenland, described the position as “disrespectful.”

He said on X that “relations between nations and peoples are built on mutual respect and international law, not on symbolic gestures that disregard our status and our rights.”

He added, however, that “there is neither reason for worry nor panic.” Our future is not determined by social media posts, nor is our nation for sale.

Jesper Moeller Soerensen, the country’s ambassador to the US, responded to the post on Sunday by saying, “We expect full respect for the territorial integrity of Denmark.”

Soerensen pointedly reminded the world that his nation had collaborated with the US to “significantly bolster its Arctic security efforts.”

Israel launches deadly strikes in Gaza in new ceasefire violations

Despite the ceasefire agreement that the United States mediated in October, the Israeli army has continued to bomb areas of Gaza that are beyond its control.

According to medical sources, at least three Palestinians were killed on Sunday in Khan Younis-related Israeli attacks.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

A 15-year-old boy, a fisherman, and a third person were among those killed east of Khan Younis.

East of the Bureij refugee camp, Israeli fire injure several people in the central portion of the besieged enclave.

In the largely destroyed Tuffah neighborhood, Israeli forces continued to destroy homes and civilian infrastructure in the north of Gaza City.

The Israeli army claimed that the target of the Israeli army’s destruction was “terrorist infrastructure above and below ground,” including tunnels in Beit Lahiya, but that it was not just the Israeli army.

In eastern Gaza City, Israeli drones also dropped explosives on a number of homes. Artillery shelling hit Gaza City’s Shujayea and Zeitoun neighborhoods, which have also been heavily attacked in the past two years of Israel’s genocidal war.

Since the start of the war in October 2023, the Gaza-based Ministry of Health has released the most recent statistics, including at least 71, 386 Palestinians killed and 174 others injured. Since the ceasefire was signed less than three months ago, at least 420 people have died.

Despite testimony from the United Nations and other parties working on the ground, the Israeli military maintains that there is no shortage of aid while continuing to block a significant portion of the international humanitarian aid amassed at the border with Gaza.

Israel kills two people in new attack on southern Lebanon

Two people have been killed in southern Lebanon as a result of an Israeli drone attack, according to the Lebanese Ministry of Health.

Ihab al-Aqdi, a reporter for Al Jazeera from Lebanon, reported that the attack occurred in the Ayn al-Mizrab region north of Bint Jbeil on Sunday. He added that nearby buildings were damaged and that the car targeted had been destroyed.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Hezbollah was the target of the attack, according to the Israeli military, who had accused the Lebanese organization of breaking a November 2024 ceasefire.

Despite the ceasefire’s terms, which put an end to a yearlong conflict that had ravaged both Lebanon and Hezbollah’s leadership, Israel has repeatedly struck Lebanon since the ceasefire. On the Lebanese side of the border, Israel continues to occupy five locations.

Since the ceasefire, more than 300 people have been killed in Lebanon by Israeli attacks, including 127 civilians.

Hezbollah is expected to disarm, according to Israel, which has American support. The Lebanese government and army are now in a difficult position trying to placate Israel and the US while avoiding a military conflict with Hezbollah, which continues to be strong despite the losses it has suffered from Israel.

Hassan Nasrallah, its long-time leader, was killed in a Beirut Israeli attack in September 2024, among the losses.

On Tuesday, the Lebanese government is scheduled to meet to discuss the army’s progress in ending Hezbollah, which will begin in southern Lebanon. Prior to the start of the disarmament process in the rest of the nation, it had established a deadline for 2025. Hezbollah, however, rejected the idea.

In the upcoming week, peacekeepers from Lebanon, Israel, France, the United States, and the UN will also be gathered to discuss the ceasefire.

Venezuela decries ‘cowardly kidnapping’ as officials back Maduro

Vladimir Padrino Lopez, the defense minister for Venezuela, has described the US’s decision to kidnap president Nicolas Maduro as a “cowardly kidnapping,” claiming that some of the president’s bodyguards and civilians were killed “in cold blood” on the side of the country.

Additionally, Padrino Lopez endorsed a Supreme Court decision that appointed vice president Delcy Rodriguez, who also serves as oil minister, as acting president for 90 days in his televised statement on Sunday.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Rodriguez’s refusal to cooperate with Washington sparked a “very big price,” according to US President Donald Trump. In a telephone interview, Trump claimed that if she doesn’t do what’s right, she will end up paying a lot more than Maduro.

In the early hours of Saturday, US forces bombed military installations and drove away Maduro and his wife to New York to face drug trafficking charges. At Stewart Air National Guard Base in New York state, the Venezuelan president was taken to a Brooklyn jail after being escorted off a plane.

On Monday, he will appear in federal court in Manhattan for his first time.

Venezuelan oil is being benefited by US oil blockade.

On Sunday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio made the suggestion that Washington would only be able to impose an existing “oil quarantine” and use that leverage to push for policy changes in Venezuela.

Rubio’s statements, one day after Trump’s announcement that the oil-rich country would “run,” appeared to temper concerns. Parts of the Trump administration’s own Republican Party coalition, including those who oppose foreign interventions, and those who recall previous efforts to build a nation in Iraq and Afghanistan, were uneasy about the Trump administration’s actions.

Rubio refrained from expressing such sentiments, claiming that Trump’s intentions had been misunderstood by a “foreign policy establishment” that was focused on the Middle East.

According to Al Jazeera’s Phil Lavelle, who is based in Doral, Florida in the US, Trump was elected despite having adopted an “America First” policy that prohibited US service members from engaging in international conflicts or putting US service personnel in danger.

Lavelle remarked, “We’re not afraid to put boots on the ground,” which he had said less than 24 hours ago.

Trump’s military action in Venezuela was met with protests in numerous US cities. In downtown Los Angeles, hundreds of people gathered in the rain with signs urging the government to stop bombing Venezuela right away. and “No Blood for Oil”

I vehemently oppose US imperialism. They want to aid the corporate billionaires, but they also want oil. They only have a means of acquiring control through bombing, which is their only way to do so. I’m also opposed to it, according to one protester, Niven.

Trump claimed that Venezuela had “stolen” oil from the US and that it would now be taken back in a speech on Saturday that he made little mention of despite making little mention of it in his speech.

Ben Saul, the UN special rapporteur on human rights and counterterrorism, criticized Trump’s actions in Venezuela and demanded that he be questioned and impeached. Every life lost in Venezuela is a death sentence. In a social media post, he retorted that President Trump should be impeached and the alleged killings should be looked into.

On Monday, the UN Security Council (UNSC) met to discuss Venezuela’s current situation. The US strikes, which a spokesperson called “a dangerous precedent,” “deeply alarmed” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, said he was “deeply alarmed” by them.

Uncertainty after Maduro’s abduction in Venezuela

Venezuelans in Caracas have praised the US’s seizure of Maduro, but others fear that it will worsen the country’s conflict and cause protests that denounce the US.

Because it has been 28 years of government, there should be a positive change for all Venezuelans, according to Ronald Gaulee, a motorcycle rider in Caracas.

Juan Carlos Rincon, the merchant, was more cautious. He told the Reuters news agency, “The truth is that there is a lot of manipulation behind all this.” Venezuela has the right to choose its own destiny and its own leaders, just like any other country does; we want to be in peace and move forward.

Baker Franklin Jimenez vowed to follow the government’s advice to stand up for the country. He said, “If they had taken him away, I believe they shouldn’t have,” because it would have led to a conflict that worsened than the one we currently have. We must go out to defend our country, to defend ourselves, and that includes bombings and other incidents.

In the face of uncertainty, some Venezuelans crossed the Venezuela-Colombia border to travel to Cucuta, Colombia, where they made the decision to flee. San Cristobal, a city in Venezuela, is in a “tense situation,” according to Karina Rey, who lives nearby.

People are extremely paranoid or apprehensive about food, and there are long lines. Rey reported to Al Jazeera that “supermarkets are closing”. We don’t know what will happen in the upcoming weeks, so the lines are very long just to stock up on food. What will happen, we’re anticipating it.

Many Venezuelans there initially felt jubilant after Maduro’s ouster, according to Al Jazeera’s Alessandro Rampietti, who was based in Cucuta. He claimed that “that quickly shifted to uncertainty.”

According to Rampietti, “a number of people predicted that the United States would immediately re-enter Maria Corina Machado and Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia, who many Venezuelans believe won the previous presidential election,”

There is growing concern about what might happen next, especially with the majority of the current leadership still in place and Vice President Delcy Rodriguez being appointed interim leader.

What will happen next, according to Tiziano Breda, a senior analyst at the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, depends on how the government and the armed forces react.

Cameroon edge South Africa 2-1 to book AFCON quarterfinal with Morocco

Cameroon advanced to the Africa Cup of Nations quarterfinals with a score of 2-1 as Junior Tchamadeu and Christian Kofane scored either side of halftime to defeat South Africa.

Two minutes after half-time, Kofane, a 14-year-old Bayer Leverkusen forward, scored the crucial second goal at Al Medina Stadium in Rabat. Tchamadeu opened the scoring in the 34th minute.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

Evidence Makgopa rallied late from South Africa, but it was Cameroon who prevailed. The hosts, Morocco, will play the five-time champions in a heavyweight quarterfinal on Friday.

They can relax before the match, knowing that Morocco will be under no pressure to defend their title in front of their own home supporters.

After a chaotic start, when Samuel Eto’o, the president of the football federation, and Indomitable Lions legend, replaced Marc Brys as the coach, David Pagou, Cameroon’s AFCON was already a success.

Hugo Broos, who had been South Africa’s top coach for nine years, was deposed by the new coach, who had promised to show no mercy to Cameroon at the time of their last continental crown at the Cup of Nations in Gabon.

Bafana Bafana, who finished third in the last AFCON in Ivory Coast two years ago, will be greatly disappointed, but they can make themselves at ease by focusing on the upcoming World Cup.

However, South Africa had opportunities to take the lead early, but within seven minutes Relebohile Mofokeng wasted a valuable opportunity.

Mofokeng was put on goal by Cameroon’s Che Malone after a simple ball was sent back, but the Orlando Pirates forward blazed over.

The offside flag then prevented Lyle Foster from finding the net, so Cameroon won the match shortly after the half-hour mark.

The ball fell to Carlos Baleba on the edge of the area when the South African defense could only partially clear a corner.

The London-born full-back with Stoke City rolled home from close range after he tried a shot that was deflected into Tchamadeu’s path.

The Cameroonian fans, who made up the majority of the 14, 127 crowd, included Eto’o, a two-time AFCON champion, among those in attendance. That goal was confirmed after a lengthy VAR check.

South Africa had anticipated a strong second half start, but Cameroon did not. Within two minutes of the restart.

Mahamadou Nagida’s substitution crossed from the left, and Kofane scored the tournament’s second goal.

After 88 minutes, Cameroon goalkeeper Devis Epassy turned in a low cross from fellow substitute Aubrey Modiba to make good saves from Samukele Kabini and a Teboho Mokoena free-kick.

That resulted in a grandstand finish, but Cameroon resisted.

Tanzania vs. Morocco

With a nervous 1-0 Round-of-16 victory over Tanzania in Rabat earlier on Sunday, Brahim Diaz scored his fourth goal for Morocco at the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations.

It took a fine strike from Diaz to secure a spot in the last eight, where Morocco dominated possession but Tanzania had opportunities as well.

On 64 minutes, Diaz was given a feeding from the team’s Achraf Hakimi on the right side of the box, and he shot into the goal from a close angle when most people expected a cross.

Brahim Diaz of Morocco celebrates scoring against Tanzania [Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters]

With the score at 0-0, Morocco squandered several more chances, but they were fortunate that Tanzania also wasted chances, with Feisal Salum and Simon Msuva both missing crucial opportunities.

The home team, who have yet to hit the top of the tournament, did enough to maintain their momentum.

Diaz said, “We faced our toughest opponent in this Tanzania team, and the competition is getting stronger.”

We are aware that not everything worked, but we are fortunate to have advanced to the next round of qualifying. We’re going back to work now so we can finish the quarterfinals.