Greenland is not just a territorial concern. It is a reckoning

Denmark is in panic mode as the United States threaten to overtake Greenland. While smaller contingents of Danish soldiers have been sent to the island as a show of support, European allies have sent more.

International law, self-determination, and sovereignty have all recently become urgent. Politicians in Dane speak of principles, boundaries, and the dangers of great power politics.

Denmark appears surprised, not as though it is panicking, which is what is striking.

Greenland has a strategic bent. It has always been. In a more difficult global order, it is favored due to its location, resources, and military value. The island’s renewed interest is neither a coincidence nor a momentary overreaction. It serves as the logical conclusion of an imperial worldview that prioritizes power, access, and control over international norms’ formalities.

Denmark is uneasy about the situation in Greenland because of the threat itself. It serves as the reflection in the mirror.

Denmark has been a trustworthy partner in advancing that same imperial worldview elsewhere for decades. It firmly sided with the US militarily and diplomatically. Under the guise of security, values, and alliance loyalty, Denmark engaged in conflicts that altered entire regions. The abstractions of geopolitics suddenly become apparent as Danish territory is subject to the same imperial logic.

Denmark must confront this irony.

Denmark is well-versed in debates that concern Greenland. That is important sovereignty. That the territories are not commodities. That applying international law indefinitely is illegal. These ideas were notably absent from Denmark’s considerations when it joined the Iraq invasion, a war that was launched without a legal mandate and was quickly sparked by false claims.

These arguments were also weakened in Afghanistan, where the conflict ended with exhaustion and the return to the status quo rather than stability. They almost completely vanished in Libya, where Danish aircraft had a major influence on Muammar Gaddafi’s regime’s fall. A shattered state, characterized by militias, chaos, and human trafficking, followed.

Denmark’s involvement in Syria was a part of a larger Western intervention, both direct and indirect. A prolonged proxy war with disastrous effects on people’s lives and regional stability was the result of a popular uprising.

As necessary, each of these interventions was framed. Each was depicted as a moral obligation. Each case was defended by a global rules-based system. Each in turn contributed to the erosion of the very standards that Greenland and Denmark currently invoke.

This contradiction can’t be ignored in Palestine.

Israel is a close ally of Denmark, but the country’s political leadership has remained remarkably restrained as Gaza has been reduced to rubble. Denmark’s response to the threat of genocide has been cautious to the point of silence despite international legal experts, humanitarian organizations, and UN bodies’ warnings. The demand for accountability has decreased. There has been a delay inoral clarity.

Danish industry is still mired in the machinery of war at the same time. F-35 fighter jets, which have been a key component of the bombardment of Gaza, are still supplied by a Danish defense company. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should he enter Denmark, but Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen declined to provide a specific response when pressed on whether international arrest warrants would be enforced.

Law is constrained. Principles are flexible. A world where the rule of law is determined by power has long been restored through Denmark.

Imperial violence has been practiced elsewhere for many years. to people in other places. The effects were exported. destabilized regions Mass exodus Rapid entanglement the ongoing devaluation of international institutions. Europe largely rejected the fallout as being related to its own political choices, though it largely absorbed it. No exceptions were made in Denmark.

That distasteful distance is broken by Greenland. Gaza exposes the moral foundation that underlies it.

Not unfairly, Denmark is currently experiencing. It’s exposure.

The arguments that were once used to justify Middle Eastern intervention are now being used in a more global context. strategic necessity Security concerns. global competition These ideas are not novel. They are merely being used in a direction Denmark didn’t anticipate.

The limits of moral selectivity are revealed in this particular instance. International law cannot be defended only when necessary. In the Arctic, sovereignty cannot be revered and relinquished elsewhere. When global power dynamics change, small states cannot rely on principles they helped to undermine.

The implications are significant for Europe as a whole. A relationship with an empire does not guarantee its protection. No autonomy is produced by loyalty. A continent that tolerates the encroachment of international law will eventually experience homelessness.

Greenland is more than just a territorial issue. It’s a calculation.

The irony is completely lost. Is it still uncertain whether Denmark and Europe will ultimately choose to take their lessons?

Dual citizenship: Bangladesh’s latest political flashpoint before elections

Dhaka, Bangladesh — Chanting slogans outside the headquarters of the Bangladesh Election Commission (BEC) on Sunday, student activists of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) accused the body of bias, as police and border guards stood watch.

Ahead of the February 12 national vote, the members of the Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal (JCD) — the BNP’s student wing — were demanding that the BEC allow candidates with dual citizenship to contest.

The same night, though, the polling authority came under verbal attack from the opposite political corner too. Leaders of the National Citizen Party (NCP), which emerged from the protests that led to the ouster of then Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in August 2024, also accused the BEC of bias and acting in favour of the BNP.

The competing accusations against the election body underscore a deepening divide over who should be allowed to contest in the elections that threatens to derail the country’s preparations for the elections.

NCP spokesperson Asif Mahmud Sajib Bhuiyan said at a news conference on Sunday that the party might reconsider its participation in the election.

The dispute

Under Bangladeshi law, foreign citizens are barred from contesting parliamentary elections.

During scrutiny of nomination papers and a subsequent nine-day appeal process that ended on Sunday, the BEC reviewed dozens of objections related to the alleged dual citizenship of 25 candidates.

Ultimately, the commission upheld the candidacy of 23 candidates and cancelled the nominations of the remaining two.

In several instances, the BEC cleared the nominations after candidates submitted documents or affidavits stating that they had renounced, or applied to renounce, foreign citizenship.

All parties appear to have benefitted from the BEC’s decision to allow these candidatures. Of the 23 that were approved, 10 belong to the BNP. Four candidates of the Jamaat-e-Islami, the country’s largest Islamist group and the NCP’s coalition partner, were also approved, as well as an NCP candidate, despite questions over dual citizenship. Another approved candidate belongs to the Khelafat Majlis, also an alliance partner of the Jamaat and the NCP.

The remaining seven candidates to be approved by the BEC belong to smaller parties or are contesting as independents, not allied with either of the two leading groups.

The NCP claims that its candidate, whose nomination was under scrutiny, had not informed it about his dual citizenship, and the party has decided to withdraw his candidacy in the election.

Mahabub Alam, an NCP leader who attended the BEC hearings where the complaints were heard, told Al Jazeera: “Requiring candidates to prove they have renounced foreign citizenship while accepting only future commitments constitutes selective and unconstitutional treatment.”

He claimed that the approach “favours certain parties”, alluding to the BNP, whose candidates are the largest beneficiaries of the BEC move to allow some dual citizens to contest. Alam pointed out that candidates who had submitted applications to renounce foreign citizenships could also withdraw those pleas before a final decision, without Bangladeshi authorities necessarily getting to know.

Chief Election Commissioner AMM Nasir Uddin rejected the allegations of bias, saying the decisions were guided by a desire to ensure participation.

“We want an election with participation from all sides,” he told candidates and their representatives after the hearings. “We have not delivered any judgement with bias.”

Past track record

Bangladesh currently allows its citizens to obtain a second citizenship from a list of 103 countries.

However, Article 66(2) of its Constitution disqualifies a person if they acquire the citizenship of a foreign state.

The current battle lines are drawn over interpretations of what the Constitution says. Does a candidate need to complete the formal renunciation of foreign citizenship before submitting nomination papers? Or is applying to relinquish that citizenship sufficient to avoid disqualification?

Critics argue that accepting affidavits or verbal assurances weakens constitutional safeguards and allows selective enforcement.

Under United Kingdom procedures, for instance, a declaration of renunciation must be registered by the Home Office before it takes effect; until then, the applicant remains a British citizen.

The BEC has not publicly issued detailed legal reasoning for individual decisions so far.

The commission has, however, previously cancelled candidacies over dual citizenship. In January 2024, Shammi Ahmed, a nominee of Hasina’s Awami League party for Barishal-4 constituency, had her candidacy cancelled by the BEC over dual citizenship allegations — a decision later upheld by the Supreme Court’s Appellate Division.

Political pressure intensifies

The dispute moved beyond the Election Commission on Sunday evening when a Jamaat-e-Islami delegation, led by party chief Shafiqur Rahman, met interim government head Muhammad Yunus.

After the meeting, Syed Abdullah Muhammad Taher, Jamaat’s deputy chief, also accused the BEC of bias in decisions on candidate nominations, including on questions of dual citizenship.

Without naming any party, Taher said Jamaat had heard that pressure was being exerted on the commission to prevent the cancellation of nominations that should otherwise have been declared invalid due to legal flaws.

“We want to state clearly that the Election Commission must not bow to any pressure — whoever the party may be, even if it is Jamaat-e-Islami,” he said.

A day later, on Monday afternoon, an NCP delegation led by party convener Nahid Islam also met Yunus, accusing the BEC of acting under pressure from the BNP in allowing candidates accused of holding foreign citizenship to contest.

Speaking to journalists afterwards, Nahid said the commission had deviated from its legal position.

“There are candidates with dual citizenship in the BNP, and there are candidates with dual citizenship in Jamaat,” he said. “Which party they belong to is not the issue. The issue is whether the law is being applied equally to everyone.”

“It is clear that the commission has moved away from the legal position under pressure from one party and is using a flawed interpretation of the law to give these candidates an opportunity,” he added.

“If the Election Commission cannot maintain neutrality, how can we expect a fair election?” Nahid said, warning that continued bias would raise doubts about the credibility of the vote.

Nahid said the party would challenge the decisions in court and could take to the streets if necessary.

‘Ethically problematic too’

Political analyst Mohiuddin Ahmad said allowing dual citizens to run was not only unconstitutional but also “ethically problematic”.

He questioned whether allegiance to another state could be reconciled with representing Bangladeshi voters.

“If the commission knowingly overlooks constitutional requirements, it undermines its mandate and risks invalidating the election itself,” he told Al Jazeera.

Dilara Choudhury, a political analyst, said affidavits alone were insufficient to meet legal requirements and warned that the BEC risked losing moral authority if it failed to adhere strictly to procedure.

Israel bulldozes UNRWA buildings in occupied East Jerusalem

As the far-right government severely restricts humanitarian organizations that provide desperately needed aid to Palestinians in Gaza, Israel has begun razing the UN agency’s (UNRWA) headquarters in occupied East Jerusalem.

UNRWA claimed in a statement released on Tuesday that Israeli forces had seize employee computers and forced them to leave their Sheikh Jarrah headquarters.

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“UNRWA and its premises are the targets of an unprecedented attack,” the statement reads. It “violates gravely international law and the rights and privileges of the United Nations,” it said.

According to local media reports, an Israeli army group reportedly stormed the agency’s compound after blocking the neighborhood’s streets and putting its military presence there, before going on to destroy the building’s interior, according to the Palestinian news agency Wafa.

UNRWA director Philippe Lazzarini claimed the attack was “in response to other steps taken by Israeli authorities to erase the Palestine Refugee identity.” Additionally, Israeli lawmakers and members of the government were present.

He also cautioned that “any other international organization or diplomatic mission” will be affected by what transpires today in the world.

UNRWA has been repeatedly attacked by Israel for having pro-Palestinian biases and accusing the organization of having ties to Hamas, which the UN agency has vehemently denied.

According to Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the demolition was in compliance with a recent law that outlawed the organization.

Itamar Ben-Gvir, the head of national security, claimed in a statement that he had taken the workers there on a “historic day” and that he had accompanied them there.

After dozens of international aid organizations’ efforts to aid Palestinians in the Gaza Strip’s devastated region were banned, Israel faced international condemnation.

For breaking new government regulations, Israel has suspended the operating licenses of&nbsp, 37 aid organizations, including Doctors Without Borders, known by its French names, MSF, and the Norwegian Refugee Council.

International NGOs operating in Gaza and the occupied West Bank are required to provide detailed information about their funding and operations in accordance with the new regulations.

According to Al Jazeera’s Nida Ibrahim, who is based in Ramallah and is in the occupied West Bank, the escalation came as a result of Israeli forces’ “monstrations against Palestinians in Gaza” and a ban on organizations from “offering assistance to Palestinians in there.”

She added that the anniversary of a significant Israeli attack on three Palestinian refugee camps is approaching and that an “intense” operation is being conducted in Hebron.

According to Ibrahim, “Israeli forces have started destroying homes and roads in an effort to change the meaning of these camps, what they resemble, and what they represent, which is the Palestinian identity and the Palestinian right to return to the homes they were displaced from,” many people have said.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week that if UNRWA’s laws are repealed and its seized assets and property are returned, he could bring his country before the International Court of Justice.

Guterres wrote to Netanyahu on January 8 that the UN cannot continue to ignore “actions taken by Israel that are in direct violation of international law.” They must be immediately reversed.

UNRWA’s operations in Israel were prohibited by the Israeli parliament’s law in October 2024, which also outlawed contacts between Israeli officials and the organization. Last month, it amended the law to forbid the supply of water or electricity to UNRWA facilities.

Last month, Israeli authorities seized UNRWA’s offices in East Jerusalem. Israel considers Jerusalem to be a part of the nation, whereas the UN views Jerusalem as being occupied by Israel.

Australian Parliament backs tighter gun, hate crime laws after Bondi attack

In response to the recent mass shooting at a Jewish festival in Sydney’s Bondi Beach, Australian lawmakers have passed tougher laws to prevent hate crimes and gun violence.

A new national gun buyback scheme, stricter gun license checks, and a crackdown on hate crimes were all supported by the House of Representatives on Tuesday.

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When two gunmen opened fire on a Hanukkah celebration at the iconic Sydney beach on December 14th, killing 15 people, the majority of them Jews. A Muslim hero, Ahmed al-Ahmed, later disarmed them.

According to Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke, the attack was carried out by people who “have hate in their hearts and have guns in their hands” and that they need a “complete response from the government.”

Sajid Akram and his son Naveed, who are currently on suspicion of attacking in Australia, were thought to be ISIL (ISIS) members.

According to Burke, “We as a government must do everything we can to combat both the motivation and the method.”

The Senate, which was scheduled to vote later in the day, must still approve the legislation relating to guns and hate speech.

Despite opposition from the conservative Liberal-National Coalition, the anti-hate laws are likely to pass with the support of the Liberal Party, while the gun control laws are expected to pass with the support of the Greens.

Background checks for gun permits will be made possible by the new firearms regulations, which will include intelligence services’ input.

The bill, according to Liberals’ Shadow Attorney General Andrew Wallace, revealed “the contempt the government has for Australia’s million gun owners.”