June 6, 2003
Canada:
Talks about missile defence to start
SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE
Last week, John McCallum,
Canadas defence minister, said negotiations on Canadas involvement
in the U.S. national missile defence program could lead to a decision to join
the NMD within months.
McCallum told the House
of Commons in Ottawa that cabinet will have the final say on whether Canada
joins in.
Several conditions will
dictate Canadas involvement, he said. Canada wants the NORAD, the North
American Aerospace Defense Command, whose leadership is shared between the U.S.
and Canadian military, to be in charge of the system.
Banning weapons in space
is also part of the deal and Canada would like to see a treaty that prohibits
the use of weapons in space.
We want to participate
hopefully through NORAD to the defence of North America against
missiles. We will not participate in a program if it is to be the weaponization
of space, Prime Minister Jean Chrétien said in a press conference
last week.
And Canada doesnt
want to see any missiles deployment sites on its soil.
Chrétien said joining
the U.S.-led defence program would not be in the Canadian national interest.
We are starting discussions
because it is the defence of our cities, Chrétien said.
At stake are also billions
of dollars in contracts from NMD construction contracts.
June
6, 2003
Alaska: Stranded hunters sail home in makeshift umiaq
SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE
Two Inupiat men from Gambell,
Alaska, used garbage bags to return home to their St. Lawrence Island community
after the motor on their boat died in rough seas. Their inspiration: the trusty
skin umiat that they remembered from the past.
The two men in their 30s,
Denis James and Jerry Aningayou, used a raincoat on the top, along with two
large garbage bags and two smaller ones to make a sail that they rigged together
with four pieces of rope.
Their Global Positioning
Unit said they were around 100 km from Gambell. Using their broken motor as
a rudder, the men steered home through pelting rain and three metre-high seas.
Efforts to search for them had hampered by the bad weather.
But after 50 hours of sailing
the two reached home where anxious relatives had been praying for their return.
June
6, 2003
Greenland: Fake Tupilaks flood market
SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE
The Danish daily newspaper
Politiken reported last week that cheaply carved sperm whale teeth from
Bali are being smuggled into Denmark and Greenland to be sold as authentic Greenlandic
Tupilaks.
Customs officials in Denmark
seized 20 fake tupilaks last month in a knapsack just one of several
similar seizures over recent months.
Due to an international
ban on trade in whale products, most tupilaks are carved from narwhal teeth
or reindeer bones. Genuine sperm whale pieces are selling for more that $1000.
Officials are worried that
the cheaper fakes will cut into the market for the genuine article.
If it takes an expert
to tell the difference between a genuine and a fake tupilak figure, the average
tourist or consumer at large is going to shy way from buying anything at all,
biologist Thor Hjarsen said in an interview.
The Home Rule Government
has already issued a warning about the fake tupilaks.
June
6, 2003
Greenland: Lets have the truth about Thule
SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE
Kuupik Kleist, one of Greenlands
two members of parliament in Denmark, said he wants an impartial, outside expert
to see whether or not there are really two more bombs under the water 10 km
from the Thule Air Base in northern Greenland.
Kleist said he doesnt
trust the Americans to judge whether the bombs are still there.
Last week, Greenlands
newspaper Atuagalliutit wrote there were more than four bombs on board
when an American B-52 bomber crashed in 1968 near the Thule air base. Only two
have been found.
Impartial experts
should collect evidence, Kleist said. We should get help from experts
who know about such things.
Kleist said he feels frustrated
that Danish officials have been secretive about the crash and what was on board
the B-52 that crashed.
These questions
and anger over the unresolved environmental and social impacts caused
by the Thule-U.S. presence in Greenland continue to provoke reaction in Nuuk.
Last week 1,100 Nuummiut
came to support a benefit concert for the Inughuit, who were relocated from
their community, Uummannaq, near the Thule Air Base in 1953.
The Inughuit are in a legal
battle with Denmark for damages related to their relocation as well as compensation
for the hunting lands.
The concert, which was
arranged by the Inuit Circumpolar Conference in Greenland, was timed to coincide
with the 1953 relocation.
We are going to use
the money collected for the ongoing court case at the supreme court of Denmark,
said Aqqaluk Lynge, Greenlands vice-president of the ICC.
June
6, 2003
Norway: We want to destroy Canada goose eggs
SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE
The Norwegian government
wants to start puncturing the unhatched eggs of Canadian and grey geese to control
the geese population. When eggs are pierced, no chicks can form thereby
reducing the goose population.
The Canada Goose
is a foreign species which does not fit in naturally with Norwegian fauna. We
want a drastic reduction and will reduce the population by at least half,
an official from told Oslos Aftenposten newspaper.
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