June 13, 2003
ITK candidate wants
universal Inuit election
Will new president be
seen as a board puppet?
JIM
BELL
ITK
presidential candidate Robbie Watt says all Canadian Inuit voters should choose
the president of Canadas national Inuit organization. (FILE PHOTO)
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The Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami
should go back to its old practice of holding Arctic-wide elections among all
Canadian Inuit voters to choose a president, says Robbie Watt, one of two candidates
nominated for the job.
Watt first raised the idea
in an interview with William Tagoona of CBC Kuujjuaq on June 3, after ITKs
board announced that its decision to postpone this years presidential
election for four months, until Oct. 20.
Taking into consideration
that they did not follow their set policies and procedures in regards to the
nomination process, I felt that it would only be fair to reinstate the election
process that once existed within ITK, which is a universal election, Watt
said in a telephone interview with Nunatsiaq News this week.
The last such pan-Arctic
vote was held in 1995, when Rosemarie Kuptana defeated Ruby Arnanaaq by
a narrow margin to win a second term as president of the Inuit Tapirisat of
Canada, as ITK was then known.
ITKs board removed
Kuptana before she was able to finish her term, amid a series of allegations
related to financial irregularities, and appointed Mary Sillet of Labrador to
replace her. At the time, ITK was groaning under the weight of an accumulated
deficit that exceeded $600,000.
Since then, the organizations
eight-member board, and no one else, has decided who will head Canadas
national Inuit organization.
The latest election
was scheduled for June 12, during an ITK board meeting that was supposed to
have been held in Puvirnituq.
Watt, and Pitseolak Pfeiffer,
ITKs former socio-economic director, had each been accepted as eligible
candidates after the nomination period closed on May 23.
But in an abrupt move last
week, ITKs board delayed the Puvirnituq vote and the election
until October, saying they want more candidates. In a press conference last
week, ITKs current president, Jose Kusugak, refused to say why the board
believes Watt and Pfeiffer arent acceptable candidates.
That only creates
two types of candidates. One that they want, and one thats trying to run
for the Inuit.... Thats why we need a universal election to be able to
not create what Inuit are going to perceive as the board picking their puppets,
Watt said.
ITKs postponement
took both candidates by surprise. But they each say they plan to stay in the
contest, and that theyre more determined than ever before to campaign
for ITKs top job.
I was pretty shocked.
I was more or less dumbfounded. There was a lot of emotions that I was going
through, Watt said. But Ive been encouraged by quite a lot
of people just to stay in the race. This gives me more of a cause to want to
run.
The new deadline for receipt
of nominations is Sept. 20 at 5 p.m. Any Inuk, or any land claim organization,
may nominate a candidate.
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