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Latvia is to install a new government on Thursday, weeks after the previous coalition collapsed in a row over stray Ukrainian drones.
Lawmakers are set to confirm centrist Andris Kulbergs as prime minister with the aim of leading the Baltic nation until parliamentary elections on October 3.
Evika Silina resigned as prime minister on May 14 after she fired her defence minister and lost the support of his party, which had been a key coalition ally.
Silina accused the minister of not deploying anti-drone defences fast enough to parry two wayward Ukraine attack drones, which were probably knocked off course by Russian jamming.
The drones caused minimal damage but sparked widespread concern in the former Soviet republic, which is now a member of NATO and the European Union.
Several Russian and Ukrainian drones have crashed in Latvia -- and neighbouring Lithuania and Estonia -- since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has offered to send experts to Latvia to help it boost its air defences.
The new Latvian four-party coalition should enjoy a healthy majority in parliament and pursue a broadly pro-EU, pro-NATO direction. The coalition parties have stressed the need to reinforce the military and the borders of the country of 1.8 million people.
"There is a broad consensus on foreign policy priorities," political scientist Nils Muiznieks told AFP, adding that the new government was also like to keep strong solidarity with Ukraine.
J.Marek--TPP