Greenlandic lawmakers on Thursday agreed to form a new government, banding together to resist US President Donald Trump's efforts to annex the Arctic island, local media reported.
Four of the five parties elected to Greenland's Parliament earlier this month have agreed to form a coalition that will have 23 of 31 seats in the legislature.
The agreement is set to be signed on Friday, the newspaper Sermitsiaq reported, citing Jens-Frederik Nielsen, leader of the Demokraatit, the biggest party in Parliament.
The agreement comes as Trump ramps up his effort to gain control of Greenland "one way or the other".
US Vice-President J D Vance is scheduled to arrive in Greenland on Friday, where he will visit America's Pituffik Space Base, which supports missile surveillance and missile defence operations.
Also Read
After his centre-right party's surprise victory in the March 11 election, Nielsen said he wanted to form the broadest coalition possible to help resist US pressure.
The final agreement excludes only one party, Naleraq, which left the coalition talks on Monday.
Trump covets Greenland, a self-governing region of Denmark, because it has rich mineral deposits and straddles strategic air and sea routes at a time when the US, Russia and China are all vying for position in the Arctic.
"The new coalition agreement could not have come at a more opportune time as it will signal to the Vances who arrive on the same day the unity forged in defiance of what has been perceived as a campaign of disrespect and intimidation," Dwayne Ryan Menezes, founder and managing director of the Polar Research and Policy Initiative, said.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

)