April 23, 2004
Nunavut stays out
of ballistic missile debate
Territory desires "positive
role" in massive projects, Okalik says
JANE GEORGE
Nunavut is steering away from taking a position on whether Canada should participate
in the U.S. plan to build up a ballistic missile defence system.
"We don't have the jurisdiction of the federal government to decide on
matters of national and international security," Premier Paul Okalik said
last week in a speech to a Duke University Law School conference in North Carolina.
The theme of this gathering was "U.S.-Canadian Security Relations: Partnership
or Predicament?"
Okalik's speech says analyzing the "benefits, risks and advisability"
of the BMD is "not a question for the Government of Nunavut."
Participation in the U.S. scheme to protect North America by shooting down
enemy missiles over northern Alaska, Canada and Greenland is a national issue
and not a territorial or provincial matter. It's best left to the federal government,
Okalik said.
"Our national government and the international community are already staking
out national positions," he said.
Nunavut only wants "a positive role" in any projects such as the
BMD that take place in or affect Nunavut - what Okalik called a "true partnership."
"Inuit have a role to play in northern projects that require an understanding
of the Arctic when it comes to such fields as engineering, climatology and environmental
assessment," he said.
For Nunavut, mitigating the BMD's impact on Nunavummiut and Nunavut is what
counts.
"For us, this is the question that defines our partnership and our predicament,"
Okalik said.
To illustrate more clearly what he meant, Okalik mentioned the lack of partnership
in past defence projects and the negative effects that projects such as the
DEW-line had on Inuit, changing "family structures, language and traditional
ties to the land."
Okalik said Nunavut and Inuit land claims now offer some protection to Inuit
and Inuit-owned lands.
"The Nunavut land claim agreement and our government are now in place
to ensure that future development projects take into consideration the potentially
positive and negative impacts on Inuit before projects are launched in our territory,"
Okalik said.
However, the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, which represents 155,000 Inuit in
Alaska, Canada, Greenland and Siberia, and particularly ICC's president for
Greenland, Aqqaluk Lynge, have expressed caution over the U.S. move "to
upgrade military infrastructure across the Arctic and in our back yard."
The construction of a BMD site is moreover a huge project nothing of its
size and scope has yet been seen in Nunavut.
In Fort Greely, Alaska, one of several BMD sites planned for the Arctic, there
will soon be five missile silos, a revamped radar system, satellite communications
and a new command centre. A 500-person construction camp is going up near the
base.
The Ford Greely project is expected to cost more than $400 million.
The U.S. military is also upgrading radar facilities at Shemya Island in the
Aleutian Islands and a launch interceptor rocket pad in Kodiak, Alaska.
The complete BMD system is also designed to include an upgrade of the Thule
Air Base in northern Greenland or possibly the construction of a similar site
in northern Canada if the Thule site falls through for political reasons.
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