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March 12, 2004

ICC chair testifies in Washington

SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICE

Sheila Watt-Cloutier, chair of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, provided written testimony last week to the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation about the threat posed by climate change to Inuit.

Her testimony was referred to repeatedly during the proceedings when the committee heard a briefing on the Arctic Council's Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, a study of climate in the circumpolar region to be tabled in at the council's meeting next November.

"Inuit are facing the beginning of a possible end of a way of life that has allowed us to thrive for millennia because of the climate changes caused by global warming. It is predicted that is some 50 years polar bears, walrus and some species of seals will be pushed to extinction. What will be left of our culture is this comes to pass?"

Watt-Cloutier urged the U.S. to take moves to curb emissions of greenhouse gases, believed to be linked to global warming.

"Without such immediate action, not only are Inuit in peril, but the entire planet is at risk," Watt-Cloutier said.


March 12, 2004

Kayaker lost en route to North Pole

Dominick Arduin, 44, a French-born Finnish citizen who set out to reach the North Pole on her own, has not been heard from since last week. This was her second attempt to reach the pole.

Arduin was due to cross a 55-km stretch of open water by kayak on Friday. She set out on her expedition from Siberia, and planned to paddle her way to a region with a strong ice-cover.

Arduin had a small kayak, skis, and a 75-kilogram sled.

She planned to reach the geographical North Pole by skiing and by kayak, hoping to become the first woman in the world to accomplish the feat alone. She contacted her back-up group on Friday and promised to turn on her positioning beacon, but a signal providing her coordinates was never received.

Arduin was also supposed to contact her web site and the Finnish Broadcasting Company on a daily basis, but failed to do so.


March 12, 2004

Stranded Russians make it home

A major Arctic rescue effort succeeded last weekend when a helicopter plucked 12 Russian scientists off drifting ice not far from the North Pole.

Their base camp had disappeared into the sea when the ice they were on started breaking up after it was crushed by a huge wall of ice - "like a meat grinder" - according to one of the survivors.

The camp, called North Pole-32 or Sverny Polyus-32, marked Russia's return to polar research after a break of 12 years.

The ice floe was located around 700 kilometres northwest of Norwegian-controlled Svalbard Islands.

The rescue operation was tricky because the ice floe kept drifting, making it difficult to pinpoint the exact location of the Russians.

The Russians had been at the base camp since last April to study climate changes and take mineral samples.

The base already had drifted 2,750 kilometers with the ice in a clockwise direction around the North Pole.


March 12, 2004

Alaska Natives plan international summit

Alaska native leaders are planning an international summit this summer to exchange information about developing the economies of rural and indigenous communities.

The Alaska Federation of Natives said the event will take place this summer in South-Central Alaska. The date and location are still being worked out.


March 5, 2004

Court rules against aboriginal gun fees

An Ontario court ruled this week that the federal gun registry which requires aboriginal people to pay fees to possess firearms is unconstitutional and unenforceable.

In acquitting Whitesand First Nation members Mark and Leon Nayanookeesic of all charges against them, the court awarded costs against the Crown for its involvement in breaching a right protected under section 35 of the constitution.


March 5, 2004

Finns host world's coolest water sport

About 300 racers, age 11 to 79, plunged into an ice pool last week in the northern Finnish city of Muonio, part of the annual world icepool swimming championships.

Most competitors were Finnish, but four French tourists found their tour operator had signed them up the day before the race.

"This is...the only sport in which I can represent Lebanon at the world championship level," Ghadi Boustari told Reuters news service.

The 25-metre long icepool was cut into a frozen lake.

"The feeling is difficult to describe. It's something between drunkenness and euphoria," said competitor Karl Farlin, 45, who was dressed in a fur hat after finishing the race in 1 C water.

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