Around
Nunavut
June 13,
2003
Okalik gathers ammunition
at Western Premiers Conference
Premier Paul Okalik will
take a powerful new weapon to negotiations with the U.S. government to have
caribou products removed from a ban on meat products the support of the
premiers of Canadian cattle-producing provinces.
The ban was imposed after
a cow in Alberta was discovered to be infected with mad-cow disease. Support
for cattle producers dominated discussion at the Western Premiers Conference
this week in Kelowna, British Columbia, Okalik said.
The premiers seemed genuinely
surprised that the ban affected caribou products, Okalik said. The ban extends
to all ruminant animals, or mammals that chew their cud.
Okalik said the support
of the western premiers would help him persuade U.S. officials. It will
make it a lot easier to educate the Americans that way, he said.
The three Northern premiers
also secured support for a territorial economic development agreement, and a
devolution agreement for Nunavut and the Northwest Territories.
Ottawa currently provides
an economic development fund for Western provinces, and one for Eastern provinces,
but nothing for the North.
After the strong message
the Northern premiers sent in February during negotiations with the Prime Minster
for a health accord, Okalik said, the federal government should know to take
Northern concerns seriously.
I think Ottawa is
aware that we dont just talk, we actually act on our desires. And they
know we want a better deal for the North, not just on health but on a wide ranging
area of issues and we have the support of our colleagues, just like we had on
health, he said.
Were showing
the federal government that theyre not going away until they deal with
them.
June 13,
2003
30th edition of Pangnirtung
Print Collection on display
The Pangnirtung Community
Print Collection celebrates its 30th anniversary this month with the release
of the 2003 collection.
With its 30th anniversary
collection, the collective that produces the work has come full-circle, writes
Peter Wilson, general manager of the Uqqurmiut Centre for Arts and Crafts, in
the program guide for the 2003 collection.
The collection includes
the debut of Malaya Pitsiulak, the 18-year-old daughter of Lipa Pitsiulak, who
led the first group of printmakers through the early years. A print by the elder
Pitsiulak was reproduced as a postage stamp in 1977.
The 24 prints of the 2003
collection will be on display and for sale at the Nunatta Sunakkutaangit Museum
in Iqaluit beginning June 18 at 7:30 p.m.
Museum manager Brian Lunger
has invited several Pangnirtung artists and printmakers to the opening, including
Andrew Qappik and Jolly Attagooyak.
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