Trump’s Greenland ‘framework’ deal: What we know about it, what we don’t

United States President Donald Trump announced on Wednesday that he had reached a “framework of a future deal” on Greenland with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte.

He also withdrew his threat to impose 10 percent trade tariffs on eight European nations objecting to the sale of Greenland to the US – set to rise to 25 percent later in the year if no deal was reached.

Greenland is a self-governing territory which is part of the Kingdom of Denmark. Both Denmark and Greenland have repeatedly stated that the island is not for sale.

In a bid to defuse rising transatlantic tensions, Rutte met with Trump in Davos, Switzerland, during the annual summit of the World Economic Forum. During his speech at Davos on Wednesday, Trump reiterated that he wants to acquire Greenland, but ruled out taking the Arctic island by force.

On Thursday, Rutte told reporters that NATO countries would ramp up security in the Arctic as part of the agreement.

What has Trump said about the ‘framework’ for a future deal?

In a Truth Social post on Wednesday, Trump said that following a “very productive” meeting with Rutte, he had formed the “framework of a future deal with respect to Greenland and, in fact, the entire Arctic Region”.

Trump added that, under this deal, he would not impose tariffs on the eight European countries that have opposed his attempt to acquire Greenland.

He added that additional discussions are being held about “The Golden Dome as it pertains to Greenland”.

The Golden Dome is Washington’s proposed multilayered missile defence programme, which is designed to counter aerial threats. Trump announced the project in May 2025. Under it, the US will deploy missile interceptors in space to shield against ballistic and hypersonic threats. The project is set to be completed by the end of Trump’s term in 2029.

In his post, Trump said more information about the framework would be made public as negotiations progress. These talks, he said, would be led by Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Special Envoy Steve Witkoff on the US side.

“We have a concept of a deal,” Trump told CNBC later on Wednesday.

But he offered no further details about what these negotiations, such as dates or venues for upcoming talks – would involve, nor specifics on who from Europe would join.

Why is the US at odds with Europe over Greenland?

On January 17, Trump announced that from February 1, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Finland would be charged a 10 percent tariff on their exports to the US.

On June 1, the tariff was to be increased to 25 percent, he said. “This Tariff will be due and payable until such time as a Deal is reached for the Complete and Total purchase of Greenland,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

One day after he made this threat, the 27 members of the European Union convened for an emergency meeting to discuss their options. While many wanted to try to resolve the dispute via diplomatic efforts, some called for the implementation of a never-before-used “bazooka” package of retaliatory tariffs and trade restrictions. However, this could take up to a year to fully implement.

But following his meeting with Rutte on Wednesday, Trump withdrew his threat of tariffs and said a “framework for a future deal” had been reached.

Why does Trump want Greenland?

Trump, and US presidents before him, have coveted Greenland for its strategic position.

The sparsely populated Arctic island of 56,000 people – mostly Indigenous Inuit – is geographically in North America but politically part of Denmark, making it part of Europe.

Greenland’s geographical position between the Arctic and North Atlantic oceans provides the shortest air and sea routes between North America and Europe, making it crucial for US military operations and early-warning systems, especially around the Greenland-Iceland-United Kingdom gap, according to the Trump administration.

Greenland also has plentiful deposits of minerals, including large amounts of untapped rare earth metals, which are required for the production of technology ranging from smartphones to fighter jets. With global warming, more shipping routes around Greenland are opening up as the ice melts, making it of greater interest to many nations.

Did the US ever own Greenland?

During his speech in Davos on Wednesday, Trump said: “After the war, we gave Greenland back to Denmark. How stupid were we to do that? But we did it. But we gave it back.”

The US occupied Greenland in 1941 following Nazi Germany’s invasion of Denmark during World War II. It established a military and radio presence on the island, withdrawing following the end of the war. However, US forces have maintained a permanent presence at Pituffik Space Base, previously known as the Thule Air Base, in Greenland’s northwest ever since.

Denmark and the US reached an agreement in 1951, which allows the US to maintain military facilities in Greenland as part of mutual defence within the NATO framework.

Despite its presence on the island during World War II, the US never actually possessed the territory and its 1951 agreement with Denmark did not pass sovereignty of Greenland to the US.

What do we know about the framework of Trump’s future deal?

Specific details of the “framework” are unknown.

But Trump has described it as a pathway towards a “long-term deal”.

And he has specified some elements of what he expects from that deal. “It puts everybody in a really good position, especially as it pertains to security and to minerals,” Trump told reporters.

“It’s a deal that’s forever.”

On Thursday, Rutte told Reuters that will demand NATO countries ramp up Arctic security swiftly, as part of the security element of the agreement.

“We will come together in NATO with our senior commanders to work out what is necessary,” Rutte said.

“I have no doubt we can do this quite fast. Certainly, I would hope for 2026; I hope even early in 2026.”

But experts say not much else about the framework is known.

“We still don’t know what ‘framework’ actually means: is it political signalling, or does it contain concrete commitments, timelines and legal hooks? We also don’t know who the real parties are [US-Denmark only, or US-Denmark-Greenland] and what Greenland has formally endorsed,” Christine Nissen, the chief analyst at the Copenhagen-based Think Tank Europa, told Al Jazeera.

It is unclear whether Greenland has agreed to the framework of any deal or whether Greenlandic or Danish authorities were even consulted.

“There can’t be a deal without having Greenland as part of the negotiations,” Sascha Faxe, a member of the Danish parliament, told Sky News on Wednesday.

“We have a Greenlandic MP in Denmark and she’s very clear that this is not a prerogative of Rutte and NATO,” Faxe said, referring to Aaja Chemnitz Larsen, who represents one of the two parliamentary seats for Greenland in the Danish parliament.

She added: “They are very clear – Greenland is not for sale, they are not for negotiations – so it’s not real negotiations, it’s two men who have had a conversation.”

On Wednesday night, Larsen wrote in Danish in a Facebook post: “NATO in no way has the right to negotiate anything on its own about us from Greenland while bypassing us. Nothing about us, without us.”

In an X post on Wednesday, Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen wrote: “The day is ending on a better note than it began,” welcoming Trump’s ruling out the European tariffs and taking Greenland by force. “Now, let’s sit down and find out how we can address the American security concerns in the Arctic while respecting the red lines of the [Kingdom of Denmark].”

It is also not clear which other European leaders are on board with the deal. EU leaders are convening in Brussels on Thursday for emergency talks over the matter.

In an X post on Wednesday, Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni welcomed Trump’s decision to not charge tariffs on European countries. “As Italy has always maintained, it is essential to continue fostering dialogue between allied nations,” she wrote, without specifying details about Greenland or the deal.

If Washington ends up owning parts of Greenland as American overseas territory, it is not clear whether Denmark will hand over the land or whether the land will be purchased at a price. It is also not known what this hypothetical price would look like.

What natural resources does Greenland have?

Greenland is incredibly rich in minerals, including rare earth minerals used in the manufacture of batteries and high-tech industries crucial for defence. According to a 2023 survey, 25 of 34 minerals deemed “critical raw materials” by the European Commission were found in Greenland.

Greenland does not carry out the extraction of oil and gas, and its mining sector is opposed by its Indigenous population. The island’s economy is largely reliant on its fishing industry.

However, during his speech at Davos, Trump said that it was national security, and not minerals, that made it imperative for him to own Greenland.

“To get to this rare earth, you got to go through hundreds of feet of ice. That’s not the reason we need it. We need it for strategic national security and international security,” Trump said.

Referring to Trump during an interview with Fox News’s Special Report with Bret Baier on Wednesday, Rutte said: “He is very much focused on what do we need to do to make sure that that huge Arctic region – where change is taking place at the moment, where the Chinese and the Russians are more and more active – how we can protect it.”

Amid global warming, the vast untapped resources of the Arctic are becoming more accessible. Countries like the US, Canada, China and Russia are now eyeing these resources.

Russia and China have been working together to develop Arctic shipping routes as Moscow seeks to deliver more oil and gas to China amid Western sanctions, while Beijing seeks an alternative shipping route to reduce its dependence on the Strait of Malacca.

“Negotiations between Denmark, Greenland and the United States will go forward aimed at ensuring that Russia and China never gain a foothold – economically or militarily – in Greenland,” Reuters news agency reported, citing an unnamed NATO source.

On Wednesday, Russian news agencies quoted Russian President Vladimir Putin as saying: “What happens in Greenland is of absolutely no consequence to us.”

What about the ownership of Greenland?

On Wednesday, Rutte said during the interview that the issue of whether Greenland will remain Danish territory did not come up during his discussion with Trump.

When Rutte was asked whether Greenland would remain under the Kingdom of Denmark, he responded: “That issue did not come up any more in my conversations tonight with the president.”

Trump has previously said that Washington needs to own Greenland, rather than lease it.

“You defend ownership. You don’t defend leases. And we’ll have to defend Greenland. If we don’t do it, China or Russia will,” Trump told reporters at the White House on January 9.

During his speech at Davos, Trump reiterated that he wants Washington to own Greenland, despite the US military presence there under the 1951 agreement.

Nissen, of Think Tank Europa, explained that this agreement already grants the US very extensive operational rights in Greenland pertaining to construction, movement and logistics. But, she added, the arrangement is not territorial, and sovereignty sits with Denmark and Greenland’s self-government.

“The US cannot exercise civil authority, change laws, control borders as a state, or transfer the territory. So Denmark and Greenland’s hard red line is straightforward: no ‘ownership’ and no territorial transfer through a deal.”

On Wednesday, The New York Times, however, cited three unnamed senior officials involved in the latest Greenland talks, reporting on the possibility that the framework could involve conversations over giving Washington sovereign control over small pockets of Greenland for military bases.

In theory, these pockets would be similar to the concept of the UK’s bases in Cyprus, which are regarded as British territory, one of the officials told The Times, while another confirmed this.

The UK has two Sovereign Base Areas (SBAs) inside Cyprus, namely Akrotiri and Dhekelia. These are legally British-owned territories within Cyprus.

SBAs are purely for military use and governed almost entirely as military installations, where authority is essentially military and centralised.

“There are rumours that Trump may still imagine some form of US ownership of a very small piece of land, but Rutte has indicated that this was not substantively on the table,” Nissen said.

“If any element of the deal were to involve even a symbolic transfer of territory, that would cross a red line for Denmark, Greenland and Europe, and would set a dangerous precedent for sovereignty and the Western order.”

Nissen explained that even if there is a framework, Denmark and Greenland have legal options to constrain US ambitions for the island.

They could insist that US influence is limited to “rights of use” to territory rather than anything resembling sovereign control or exclusive jurisdiction. Essentially, she argued, they could use bureaucracy to bolster their positions.

“They can use governance tools that matter in practice: consultation clauses, joint oversight bodies, transparency requirements, clear review points and meaningful termination options – plus domestic law and permitting [land use, environment, infrastructure approvals] that can shape or slow what ambitions become on the ground.”

She explained that a likely outcome could involve strengthened US access to Greenland and an update to the 1951 defence deal — with more NATO branding, extra infrastructure and investment, and limited, targeted cooperation on minerals.

What are some overseas territories?

Greenland is actually one of two Danish self-governing overseas territories, the other one being the Faroe Islands.

The Arctic island was a Danish colony in the early 18th century, after an expedition led by Danish-Norwegian missionary Hans Egede arrived in 1721. In 1979, it became a self-governing territory. Since 2009, Greenland has the right to declare independence through a referendum.

The UK has 14 overseas territories across the Atlantic, Caribbean, Pacific and polar regions.

The inhabited ones, including Anguilla, Bermuda, the British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Falkland Islands, Gibraltar and Montserrat, are mostly self‑governing, with the UK responsible for defence and foreign affairs.

The US has five permanently inhabited territories — Puerto Rico, Guam, the US Virgin Islands, American Samoa and the Northern Mariana Islands — all with local governments but limited federal representation, and Puerto Rico is the largest as a self‑governing commonwealth.

Washington also controls nine mostly uninhabited islands used mainly for military or strategic purposes.

France has 13 overseas territories spread across the Atlantic, Caribbean, Indian Ocean, Pacific and South America. China has two Special Administrative Regions (SARs), Hong Kong and Macau, which are generally autonomous in terms of political, economic and legal systems.

Which teams can still qualify for the UEFA Champions League knockouts?

There is only one round of matches remaining in the league phase of this season’s UEFA Champions League (UCL), and the stakes remain high with qualification still wide open for the vast majority of the teams.

Some of Europe’s top clubs remain on red alert going into the final round of matches as teams seek to bypass the playoff stage and qualify directly for the last 16.

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A number of other teams, though, including past winners and current league champions from around the continent, are dreading the reality of an early exit.

Al Jazeera Sport takes a close look at who needs what from the final match day in the league phase to stay alive in the UCL.

How is Champions League qualification from the league phase decided?

Of the 36 teams competing in the first round of this season’s Champions League, the top eight teams from the league phase will qualify directly for the last 16.

The following 16 teams in the table will be sent to the playoff stage, where the teams will play two-legged ties with each aggregate winner joining the eight automatic qualifiers in the next round of the knockout stage.

The bottom eight teams at the end of the league phase will be eliminated from all European competition this season. In the old format, teams finishing third in the group stages would be offered the comfort of being relegated to the knockout rounds of the UEFA Europa League.

Who has already qualified for the last 16 of the Champions League?

Arsenal: The north London club were the first team to book their place in the last 16 with an impressive 3-1 win at Inter Milan on Tuesday. The league phase leaders, who also top the English Premier League by seven points, are three points clear on the UCL table and face bottom-club Kairat in the final round of games.

Bayern Munich: The German giants have also qualified after their 2-0 win at home to Union Saint-Gilloise on Wednesday and will hope to challenge the Gunners for top spot when they travel to PSV Eindhoven in the final round. It is set to be a tough task, however, as their Dutch hosts are perilously placed just above the bottom eight.

Could Real Madrid, Barcelona, PSG and Liverpool miss out on automatic qualification for the UCL’s last 16?

Yes.

A defeat in the final round of league phase games for Real Madrid, Barcelona, Paris Saint-Germain and Liverpool will leave them exposed to missing out on the top-eight spots.

Liverpool eased to a 3-0 win at Marseille on Wednesday, while Barcelona were made to work for their 4-2 win at Slavia Prague and Real thumped Monaco 6-1 on Tuesday. PSG missed out on the chance to secure their passage past the playoffs when they lost 2-1 at Sporting Lisbon on Tuesday.

Which teams have already been eliminated from the Champions League in the league phase?

Of the 32 teams competing at this stage, only four are already eliminated – Eintracht Frankfurt, Slavia Prague, Villarreal and Kairat.

Who have been the surprise package in the Champions League this season?

Tottenham currently hold fifth spot with 14 points, which is in stark contrast with their form in the Premier League as they are 14th in their domestic table and have not won in four games, losing two of those.

Which top teams are most at risk of falling into the Champions League playoffs?

Barcelona: The La Liga champions are the biggest name currently outside the automatic qualification positions as they sit in ninth spot. The good news for the Catalan club is that with PSG playing Newcastle United in the final round – and both teams currently in the top eight – a win in Barca’s final game against Copenhagen will see them qualify.

PSG and Newcastle: Both teams have 13 points, as do Barca, so even a draw at the Nou Camp on Wednesday could be enough to qualify – assuming there is a victor in the match in Paris.

The teams that sit below Barcelona cannot rest on having their fate in their own hands, given Barca’s current ranking.

From sixth position (PSG) to 13th spot, eight teams are level on 13 points.

Among those are Chelsea in eighth, Manchester City and Atletico Madrid. Inter Milan and Juventus both have 12 points.

Could one of the smaller teams leap into the top eight Champions League spots?

Borussia Dortmund and Galatasaray place just below Juventus with 11 and 10 points, respectively, but also level with the latter is Qarabag. The Azerbaijan club, which was formed only in 1987, could theoretically climb into the top eight if results go their way and they win their final game. That, however, is away to Liverpool.

Although far from being among the smaller clubs on the European stage, Sporting Lisbon and Atalanta – currently in the pack of teams on 13 points – could also leap into the top eight in the final ranking.

Which big teams could be eliminated from the Champions League in the league phase?

Four-time European champions Ajax are placed just above the bottom four eliminated teams and must beat Olympiakos at home in their final game to have any chance of qualifying for the playoff stage.

From the Dutch giants on six points in 32nd place to Marseille in 11th, just three points separate those 14 teams.

Among those currently in the bottom eight positions are Italian champions Napoli, who face a daunting trip to play Chelsea on Wednesday, and Portuguese giants Benfica, who entertain Spanish super club Real Madrid.

Although Galatasaray and Qarabag can still dream of a top-eight finish, they are joined by Marseille, Bayer Leverkusen, Monaco, PSV, Athletic Bilbao and Olympiakos, who are all in danger of dropping into the league phase’s elimination zone.

Who are confirmed of progress into at least the playoff stage?

The following teams are assured of at least reaching the playoffs:

Atalanta, Atletico Madrid, Barcelona, Chelsea, Inter, Juventus, Liverpool, Manchester City, Newcastle, PSG, Real Madrid, Sporting CP and Tottenham.

When is the final round of league phase games in the Champions League?

The final round of games will all be played on Wednesday, and all will kick off at 20:00 GMT.

What are the final round of league phase games in the Champions League?

  • Ajax vs Olympiakos
  • Arsenal vs Kairat
  • Athletic Bilbao vs Sporting Lisbon
  • Atletico Madrid vs Bodo/Glimt
  • Barcelona vs Copenhagen
  • Bayer Leverkusen vs Villarreal
  • Benfica vs Real Madrid
  • Borussia Dortmund vs Inter Milan
  • Club Brugge vs Marseille
  • Eintracht Frankfurt vs Tottenham Hotspur
  • Liverpool vs Qarabag
  • Manchester City vs Galatasaray
  • Monaco vs Juventus
  • Napoli vs Chelsea
  • PSV Eindhoven vs Bayern Munich
  • Pafos vs Slavia Prague
  • Paris Saint-Germain vs Newcastle United
  • Union Saint-Gilloise vs Atalanta

When will the Champions League playoffs be played?

The two legs will be played on February 17-18 and February 24-25.

When will the Champions League last 16 matches be played?

The two legs of the round of 16 will be played on March 10-11 and March 17-18.

When and where is the UEFA Champions League final?

Trump’s Greenland pact will demand allies boost Arctic security: NATO chief

According to NATO’s Secretary-General Mark Rutte, a new framework that was reached with US President Donald Trump as he attempted to buy Greenland will require that the country immediately increase its Arctic security.

As Washington’s traditional European allies scrambled to respond to Trump’s sudden remark regarding his threats to acquire the strategic Arctic island, a semi-autonomous territory of NATO member Denmark, the NATO chief made the remarks at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland on Thursday.

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Rutte told Reuters, “We will work with our senior commanders in NATO to determine what is required.”

“I have no doubt that we can accomplish this quickly. I certainly hope for 2026, and I hope even soon thereafter.

Trump has increased his threats to seize the island in recent weeks, citing fears that China or Russia might buy it, which could plunge US-European relations to their lowest point in decades and raise concerns about NATO’s survival.

However, the US leader unexpectedly dropped his threat to impose 10% tariffs on European nations who oppose his government’s plan to conquer the island and ruled out using force to seize it, saying he and Rutte had come to terms with a “framework” for a pending agreement involving Greenland and the Arctic region.

Trump also mentioned the “additional discussions” being held on Greenland regarding the $175 billion Golden Dome missile defence program, which will launch US weapons into space for the first time, but he provided few details about the discussions.

Rutte told Reuters that he was confident that NATO allies outside the Arctic would support the effort and that Ukraine’s support for its conflict with Russia would not suffer from increased security focus.

Rutte noted that discussions regarding the mineral exploitation on the resource-rich island had not been held during the meeting with Trump. Additionally, negotiations would continue between the US, Denmark, and Greenland itself.

Denmark is unable to bargain for its own future.

We cannot bargain over our sovereignty, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said in a statement released on Thursday.

It was “good and natural” for Trump and Rutte to discuss Arctic security, according to Frederiksen, and it was up to NATO as a whole.

She claimed to have spoken with Rutte “on an ongoing basis,” including both before and after his meeting with Trump in Davos, and that she had been informed that only Denmark and Greenland could decide matters of their own making.

Denmark wanted to keep talking with allies about strengthening security in the Arctic, including the US Golden Dome program, “provided that this is done with respect to our territorial integrity,” Frederiksen said.

Rutte said the question “did not come up again in my conversations tonight with the president” when asked whether Greenland would continue to be a part of the Danish kingdom under the framework agreement Trump announced in an interview with Fox News.

He is very focused on what we need to do to protect the vast Arctic region, where change is occurring right now, and where the Chinese and Russians are actively engaged, according to Rutte.

“Our discussions really focused on that,” she said.

Rutte “did not propose any compromise to sovereignty during his meeting with President Trump,” according to NATO spokesman Allison Hart on Thursday.

She added that discussions between Denmark, Greenland, and the US would continue in order to “make sure that Russia and China never gain a foothold in Greenland, whether economically or militarily.”

Germany backs discussions.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz reaffirmed that Europeans should not dismiss Trump’s U-turn on Greenland too quickly.

According to Merz, “We support discussions between Denmark, Greenland, and] the United States on the basis of these principles,” aiming for closer cooperation.

“We are making steps in that right direction, which is good news,” said the minister. This is the right course of action, according to President Trump’s remarks from last night.

Merz argued that the Arctic region must be more closely watched by European NATO allies because it represents “a common transatlantic interest.”

He declared, “We will shield Denmark, Greenland, and the north from the threat posed by Russia.”

“We will uphold the sovereignty and territorial integrity principles that the transatlantic partnership was founded on.”

His remarks were made at a Thursday emergency summit, when EU leaders were reportedly scheduled to discuss re-evaluating their ties to Washington.

Bangladesh adamant on playing T20 World Cup in Sri Lanka despite ICC threat

Despite the international cricket body’s refusal to change the schedule of the T20 World Cup, Bangladesh has reiterated their opposition to not visiting India for the tournament. They will once again request that Sri Lanka’s games be moved to Sri Lanka.

After a meeting between BCB officials, Bangladeshi cricketers, and government representatives in Dhaka on Thursday, BCB President Aminul Islam declared, “We will return to the ICC with our plan to play in Sri Lanka.”

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The global cricket body made the announcement a day after it warned the BCB that if Scotland refused to play its matches in Group C, the men’s T20 World Cup could be played in India.

Within a day, the ICC requested from the BCB to review its decision with the Bangladeshi government and provide a response. Then, a final decision would be made.

A global body can’t really do that, Islam said to reporters. “They did give us a 24-hour ultimatum.

“We want to compete in the World Cup, but we won’t play in India.” He continued, “We will keep fighting.”

The ICC, according to the BCB chief, would have to suffer if Bangladesh were to be kicked out of the competition.

He claimed that “the ICC will miss out on the 200 million spectators of the World Cup.”

On February 7, Bangladesh will face the West Indies at Eden Gardens in Kolkata on the opening day of the competition. Before their final Group C game against Nepal at Mumbai’s Wankhede Stadium, they will play two additional group-stage games at the same venue.

However, the BCB has withdrawn its team’s travels to India because it is concerned about the security and safety of its players.

Due to the ongoing political unrest between the two countries, Mustafizur Rahman was abruptly removed from the Indian Premier League (IPL) at the request of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).

The ICC announced on Wednesday that it had communicated with the BCB detailed independent security assessments, detailed venue-level security plans, and formal assurances from the host authorities, and that all reports stated that there was no “credible or vérifiable threat to the safety or security of the Bangladesh team in India.”

After the board of directors of the international body met via video conference to discuss the issue, an ICC spokesperson said, “Despite these efforts, the BCB kept its position by repeatedly linking its participation in the tournament to a single, unrelated, and unrelated development.”

The ICC spokesperson added that “this linkage has no impact on the tournament’s security framework or the requirements for participation in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup.”

The ICC’s claims were refuted by Asif Nazrul, a youth and sports adviser in the interim Bangladeshi government, who claimed it had failed to address Bangladesh’s concerns.

He claimed that the ICC has not been able to persuade us about the security issue and has not addressed our grievances.

Even the Indian government failed to address our concerns or attempt to calm us.

“We are optimistic that the ICC will give us a chance to play in Sri Lanka.” Our country’s government has chosen not to visit India.

Litton Das, the captain of Bangladesh, expressed concern about the uncertainty surrounding the participation of his team before the most recent round of discussions.

After a Tuesday domestic cricket game, Das declared, “From where I stand, everyone is uncertain,”

Since August last year, when former prime minister Sheikh Hasina fled to New Delhi from Dhaka after an uprising against her rule, diplomatic relations between the once-close allies have been severely hampered.

India is at fault for a number of its problems, including Hasina’s support for the country’s prime minister when she was in power.

Israeli settlers forcibly displacing largest Palestinian Bedouin village

NewsFeed

Nearly three-quarters of the Palestinian Bedouin village of Ras Ein al-Auja have been destroyed by settler violence in the occupied West Bank, causing hundreds of people to flee. Residents who remain claim that there is no other place for them to go and that they are being purposefully driven out of their homes.