Greenland Express (Aalborg) CEO Gert Brask has threatened to end his airline's relationship with Denim Air ACMI (Amsterdam Schiphol) should it be forced to cancel any more flights. Last week, the Danish virtual carrier was forced to call off flights between Denmark and Greenland when the Dutch ACMI specialist did not avail its usual Fokker 100.

"Denim Air's many cancellations have meant that we have had to send the passengers at the hotel," Brask said. "If Denim Air cancels flights once more, then our cooperation is over."

However, Denim Air ACMI Managing Director, Ronald Janssen, has refuted Brask's claims and instead placed the blame squarely on Greenland Express' shoulders. According to Jansen, the reason for the cancellation's is not, as Brask claims, a result of persistent illnesses among Denim Air's crew, but rather a question of Greenland Express' inadequate funds.

"We still have aircraft and personnel stationed in Aalborg which is where flight operations were cancelled. You see, it all depends on Greenland Express. If they have money, then we fly. If they don't have money, then we do not fly. But we aren't worried," Janssen told Denmark's CHECK-IN.dk.

An increasingly exasperated Brask has taken to social media to vent his frustrations with a recent post blaming a perceived Greenlandic/Danish conspiracy for his airline's current woes.

"How I have been attacked by the Danes and Greenlanders who only want to see me hurt and all because of a mistake I made ​​when I was young and which i am still paying for today," Greenland's Sermitsiak newspaper quoted Brask as stating via his Facebook account. "I want to give people cheaper tickets to and from Greenland, to do good, but Sermitsiak and many others just want to see my mistakes and to do me harm. So, congratulations! I give up! Now you can travel much more expensively again."