ROTTERDAM, August 27 -- Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird has expressed alarm over Russian military expansion in the Arctic, the BBC's Russian service reported Tuesday, citing a Danish newspaper. "We are deeply concerned, and we are determined to promote and defend the sovereignty of Canada in the Arctic," Baird was cited as saying in an interview with the Danish publication Berlingske. "For us, this is a strategic priority. In connection with the militarization that we are seeing, we would prefer to alleviate the conflict, but it's clear that we will defend our own sovereign power," Baird was quoted as saying. The comments were made on Monday, the same day Baird met with his Danish counterpart Martin Lidegaard to discuss the ongoing Ukraine conflict, according to ITAR-Tass. The crisis in Ukraine, which has pitted Western nations against Russia for its alleged involvement in the country's conflict-torn east, has proven detrimental to Russia's cooperation with other nations in the Arctic, the report said. Baird called on other members of the Arctic Council — which, apart from Canada, include Finland, Norway, Iceland, Sweden, Denmark, Russia and the U.S. — to "sit down and solve these problems in a constructive manner," ITAR-Tass reported. In recent years, Russia has moved to strengthen its grip on the Arctic and bolster its military presence there, with the Defense Ministry hoping to establish a military zone in the region. Russia began expanding its Arctic presence last year by reopening a military base in the Novosibirsk Archipelago, which had been abandoned decades earlier. The base has now been reinforced with several warships and nuclear-powered icebreakers. President Vladimir Putin has also made no secret of the region's strategic importance for Russia, urging officials to make the development of the area's vast untapped natural reserves a priority at a meeting of the Security Council in January. Canada has not shied away from demonstrating its own Arctic ambitions, having dispatched two icebreakers to the area in early August tasked with mapping out the Lomonosov Ridge, an area also partially claimed by Russia and Denmark. Russia's Arctic zone accounts for about 21.6 percent of its territory and is home to 2.3 million of its people. Canada's Arctic region is similarly substantial, making up over 40 percent of the nation's landmass and serving as home to more than 100,000 citizens, according to the Canadian government's website. Source: De Peet Journal
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