April 4, 2003
Smear campaign tainted vote, candidate
alleges
Aatami wins Makivik
presidency by a landslide
ODILE NELSON
Allegations of a radio
smear campaign and a defeated candidates promise to "consider her
options" may cloud Pita Aatamis March 28 re-election as president
of Makivik Corp.
Aatami won a third consecutive
term as president at last weeks Makivik annual general meeting by an overwhelming
margin.
Though only 53 per cent
of eligible beneficiaries cast ballots, Aatamis popular appeal was evident.
He took 1,745 of the 2,709 votes cast, or 64 per cent of the total. His two
rivals, Annie Popert and Johnny Oovaut, won only 25 per cent and nine per cent
respectively.
Aatami ran on a platform
of continued economic development, a reputation for brokering successful deals
including the billion-dollar Sanarrutik economic agreement with Quebec, and
support for the new-government framework negotiations between Nunavik and the
provincial and federal governments.
But Popert, whose campaign
focused on social issues and who is against the current new-government framework
agreement, was crying foul days before the election.
Popert alleges that Harry
Tulugak, a new-government negotiator for Makivik and a long-time employee of
the organization, spent the week before the election making libelous statements
against her on different community radio stations. In an interview with Nunatsiaq
News this week, Popert said Tulugaks comments, made so closely to
the election date, may have affected the election result.
"His intention was
be to smear my campaign, thats all," Popert said. "For the many
people who voted, that did not know me or my principles, it may have put a question
mark in their head and then they wouldnt vote for me then. I dont
know that for sure, but thats certainly what I would do if I had three
people running and one of thems being called a liar. It would put doubt
in my mind."
Popert, a former director-general
of the Kativik School Board, worked with Tulugak as a commissioner on the 2001
Let Us Share report. Tulugak was a strong supporter of the report, but Popert
refused to sign it.
She claimed the report,
which was intended to provide the foundation for future self-government negotiations,
threatened the right of Nunavimmiut to self-determination.
Popert alleges Tulugaks
on-air comments during the run-up to the election created a false impression
of her refusal to sign the agreement.
According to Popert, Tulugak
publicly said she lied about the Nunavik commission and that she must be an
unreasonable individual, otherwise she would have signed the document. She also
alleges that Tulugak claimed she once bumped a recently released hospital patient
off an airplane flight so she could have a seat.
Popert said she reported
Tulugaks comments to Makiviks corporate secretary two days before
the election. She requested Makivik end Tulugaks radio addresses and take
corrective measures to undo the damage that she alleges were caused by Tulugaks
words.
Popert said Makivik later
informed her that Tulugak was ordered to stop. But the organization, she said,
also told her that was all that could be done. Makivik, she said, refused to
make Tulugak apologize publicly for his remarks.
"I would have liked
someone, like the corporate secretary, to go on the regional radio station to
say, What you have been hearing is not acceptable. What has been happening
is not acceptable. We dont operate in this matter as Inuit regarding elections,"
Popert said.
Though she would not confirm
whether she is seeking legal advice, Popert said she is "considering her
options."
Harry Tulugak could not
be reached for comment as of Nunatsiaq News press-time this week. But
Lisa Koperqualuk, communications officer for Makivik, said the allegation that
Tulugaks remarks affected the election is unfounded.
"Harry I hear went
on the radio only on two occasions. It was not a factor at all in swaying popular
opinion," Koperqualuk said. "If I were to see Annie win this election
you know what I see? An angry leader and thats what I think people see
as well."
Popert dismissed the idea
that Aatamis victory is a show of popular support for the new-government
framework agreement.
"Because I was on
the commission and I didnt sign the report, people have a tendency to
say, Well its a self-government issue. But the most important
issue of my campaign was the social issues," she said.
"Our young people
are dying whether by suicide. Were losing over a dozen a year from suicide....
We have to do something for them.... Thats why I ran."
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