Inuit call for a larger role in Canada’s Arctic defence surge
OTTAWA — The leader of the national organization representing Inuit says the federal government must bring them to the table when it makes its plans for defence spending in the Arctic.
Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami head Natan Obed said Wednesday Inuit want to avoid a repeat of their experiences during the Arctic military buildup of the early Cold War, which he said “radically changed” Inuit lives by allowing the “Canadian government to coerce Inuit off of our lands into settled communities.”
He was addressing the Nordic-Canadian Arctic Symposium, an Ottawa conference that featured ambassadors from Nordic states and Indigenous representatives from Greenland and Northern Europe.
The conference took place a week before Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand is expected to open a new Canadian consulate in Greenland — and roughly a week after U.S. President Donald Trump escalated and then tempered his demands for the United States to acquire the Danish territory.


