August 15, 2003
The start of a beautiful
friendship?
KRG forges ties with
Liberal politicians
ODILE
NELSON
The new provincial minister
for Northern Quebec promised to support a riding for Nunavik and speed up the
creation of a provincial park at the Pingualuit crater after his first visit
to the region last weekend.
Pierre Corbeil, who is
also the new Liberal government's minister of forests, wildlife and parks, made
the statements after touring Nunavik with Jacques Chagnon, the minister of public
security, and Geoff Kelly, the former Liberal critic for northern affairs,on
Aug. 9 and 10.
The ministers came to Nunavik
at the request of the Kativik Regional Government.
At the end of his visit,
Corbeil said the Quebec government plans to begin reforming the province's electoral
system this fall, and that a seat for Nunavik is something the government should
consider.
"I think now, from
what I saw today and yesterday, that Nunavik should be first in the road to
attain this," he said. "Because up North, the Nunavik territory is
different. They work with regional government as well as municipal and they
pay taxes and they want to be considered as part of Quebec. We have to consider
that."
Regional politicians have
been trying to get Nunavik's provincial and federal electoral boundaries reformed
for years.
But so far, independent
electoral commissions have refused to give Nunavik its own seat in either Quebec's
National Assembly or the House of Commons because the region's population is
too small.
Chagnon, who has visited
Nunavik on three previous occasions, also said he supports the idea of a Nunavik
riding.
Some ridings in Quebec,
like les Isles de la Magdalene, are already huge exceptions to the province's
electoral quotient, or number of voters needed in any given riding to ensure
each Quebecers' vote is of equal value.
"I think we should
not keep the Magdalene Islands as an exception forever and the exception should
be here," he said.
By all accounts, the tour
marked the beginning of a beautiful friendship for the KRG and the new Liberal
provincial government that took over from the Parti Québecois earlier
this year.
During the visit, the three
Liberal MNAs were treated to some of the best of Nunavik.
They tasted home-made char
chowder in Kangiqsualujjuaq, flew by helicopter to the Torngat Mountains and
the Pingualuit crater, saw caribou, polar bears, beluga and muskox, announced
a new rehabilitation centre in Kangirsuk, and toured Kuujjuaq's char farm.
They also saw first-hand
some of the region's infrastructure needs, including better firefighting equipment,
and the need for new police stations in every community.
The ministers got an accidental
glimpse of the problems encountered when police must hold accused persons for
several days before they can be sent down south for arraignment when they toured
one of Nunavik's old police stations in Kangiqsujuaq.
As they visited the cramped
quarters, a man who had been detained in a cell for several days began swearing
at the ministers' entourage.
KRG chairman Johnny Adams
said a major reason he invited the Liberal MNAs was to familiarize them with
both Nunavik's potential and its needs.
"It is always much
easier to get projects through when they see the situation in Nunavik first
hand," Adams said. "For me, through my experience, it's always been
easier to get assistance once they come through the communities."
Corbeil agreed that his
visit further convinced him of the need to create provincial parks in the north,
and that his first priority is the Pingualuit crater.
"I want to activate
things and get them moving - to start the process pretty quickly but, that said,
we have to do it carefully because whatever we do will stay for a long, long
time," he said.
His next step, he said,
will be settling disputes about the park's boundaries. Right now several mining
companies still have claims inside the proposed park's limits.
Kangiqsujuaq mayor Charlie
Alaku welcomed Corbeil's words. His village, he said, has been waiting for the
park, and the income it promises to bring, for more than ten years.
"I hope it's not just
talk again because we've heard that before," Alaku said. "We hope
the process goes faster. It would be good for our community, Nunavik and southerners
too."
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