August 22, 2003
Search continues for
Kangirsuk foursome
Renowned Nunavik interpreter-translator
lost at sea
ODILE
NELSON
Renowned
interpreter-translator Martha Kauki was still missing as of Nunatsiaq News
press-time this week (FILE PHOTO)
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Nunavimmiut, the Canadian
Coast Guard, and local Canadian Ranger divisions continue to work and hope for
a happy end to the search for one of Kangirsuk's most admired women and her
family, after their 22-foot freighter canoe went missing off the Ungava Coast
last week.
Martha Kauki, 50, mother
of four, much admired interpreter-translator and Makivik Corp. board member,
along with her husband Joanassie Epoo and two of their children, Jacob Epoo,
20, and Victoria Epoo, 14, were last seen near Aupaluk Aug. 15 as they were
returning home from a wedding in Kuujjuaq.
But though it has now been
a full week since the family became lost at sea, Kangirsuk Mayor Joseph Annahatak
said, at this point, no one believes the family will not come home safe.
And, as of Nunatsiaq
News Wednesday deadline, local Nunavimmiut and government search and rescue
crews continued to comb Nunavik's eastern coast in a determined search for the
missing foursome.
"Right now, we [the
community of Kangirsuk] are just holding together. This is not over until we
find something," Annahatak said. "Looking back to the big search and
rescue in Aupaluk this spring, we thought the worst for them, but they came
out alive, so we still have hope. I still have hope."
Kauki, who has an infectious
love for translation and often works with elders in language development workshops,
has played a big part in the community, Annahatak said.
He won't consider the possibility
that she and her family will not return.
"Sometimes, I have
those thoughts in my mind, but I'm holding them back for now."
According to a Kativik
Regional Police Force press release, Kauki, Epoo and their four children, aged
20, 18,16 and three began their voyage home Aug 14.
Later that day, the family
of six met up with another canoe carrying two people, and the two parties set
up camp on one of the Leaf Bay islands, just outside of Tasiujaq.
When the two families rose
the next morning, the family's 16-year old daughter and three-year-old adopted
child joined the other couple on the second canoe. The two canoes then set out
again together.
But sometime late in the
morning of Aug. 15, Annahatak said, the canoes separated. The canoe with the
couple and Kauki and Epoo's eldest daughter and youngest child broke ahead.
"When he [the man
aboard the second canoe] lost sight of it [Kauki and Epoo's canoe] he just kept
going. He didn't think anything of it. Then he waited for half an hour, but
the winds were starting to pick up and rains started to pour so he couldn't
wait any more," he said.
On Saturday, Aug. 16, one
boat touched shore in Kangirsuk by mid-afternoon. But by early evening the one
carrying Kauki, Epoo, Jacob and Victoria, had still not returned, Annahatak
said.
Annahatak then got on the
phone to Kangirsuk's police officer and Johnny Adams, the chair of the Kativik
Regional Government, and officially reported the family missing.
An aerial search began
the next morning after Adams personally sent out Navajo and Twin Otter aircraft
from Kuujjuaq. Canoes were also set to begin searching but strong winds prevented
them from setting out. Six canoes finally took to the waters by mid-afternoon.
Mike Bonin, a navy spokesperson,
said the Canadian military, and the Halifax-based Rescue Coordination Centre,
were first contacted about the missing boat over the weekend.
Shortly after, the RCC
called in two coast guard vessels from nearby waters, as well as a helicopter
from Goose Bay and a Hercules from Greenwood, N.S. The two coast guard ships
also brought in helicopters and fast rescue craft.
By Tuesday afternoon, the
search had evolved to include more than 12 canoes, the two coast guard vessels,
and helicopters. But Bonin said it has been interrupted several times by bad
weather.
"There's been two
major factors. Winds are very, very high right now and there was a lot of fog
the first couple of days," Bonin said. "As well the water temperature
has been very chilly, about three degrees."
As of Wednesday afternoon,
the only possible clue to the family's disappearance was a jerry can found floating
about 100 kilometres southeast of Aupaluk. The gas can was taken to Kangirsuk
where a family member identified it as belonging to the missing canoe.
But Lieutenant-Commander
Denise Laviolette, spokesperson for the RCC, which is managing the search, said
the centre has not confirmed a positive identification.
"A family member might
have identified the jerry can, but the Rescue Coordination Centre did not,"
Laviolette said. "Are they now looking in that area more than anywhere
else? I don't think so at this point in time."
Bonin, meanwhile, said
search and rescue crews, like the community of Kangirsuk, remain hopeful.
"It's our hope they're
tucked up in an inlet somewhere waiting for the weather to die down, waiting
for us to find them," Bonin said.
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