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November 26, 2004

"Iqaluit cowboy" faces dangerous offender label

A Nunavut court judge will hear closing arguments next year about whether to label the man known as the "Iqaluit cowboy" as a dangerous offender.

Mosesee Nowdluk faces up to seven years in prison after being charged with assault, break-and-enter, and other offenses, including assault with a weapon.

Nowdluk, 39, is accused of hitting a person in the head with a hammer while they were walking in Iqaluit earlier this year.

Crown attorney Christine Gagnon said Nowdluk should be deemed a dangerous offender because he's been convicted of 14 violent offences, dating back to 1982.

Dangerous offenders are people who have shown a pattern of committing seriously violent offences, and are at risk of harming someone again.

Justice Earl Johnson finished hearing evidence in the case, including testimony from two psychologists, on Nov. 19.

Nowdluk is to appear in court on Feb. 17, when lawyers will give their final arguments in the case.

If he's labelled a dangerous offender, Nowdluk will serve seven years in prison before parole can be considered.

Johnson could rule instead that Nowdluk is a long-term offender, which means he would go to prison for two years, then be on parole for 10 years.

If Johnson rejects both labels but finds Nowdluk guilty of the charges, he would give him a regular sentence.


November 19, 2004

Drug busts in Panniqtuuq

Drug and alcohol busts are on the rise in Panniqtuuq as the police try to crack down on contraband goods coming into the community.

On Nov. 2, a 26-year-old local man was caught returning to the community with a large quantity of marijuana that police say has a street value of $21,000. He has not been charged.

On Oct. 27, police caught a 33-year-old man with $2,800 worth of liquor in the Pangnirtung airport. Mark Tiglik was charged with possession of liquor in a restricted area, and will appear in court during the court circuit in Panniqtuuq on Dec. 13.

These incidents follow the seizure of 18 pounds of marijuana in early October. Christopher Veevee was charged with possession of drugs for the purpose of trafficking.

Police in Panniqtuuq are asking residents to help them crack down on people bringing booze and drugs into the community by phoning the detachment, or calling Crimestoppers at 1-800-222-8477.


November 19, 2004

Former BCC workers must pay $41,500 for defamation

The acting deputy warden of the Baffin Correctional Centre has won a defamation lawsuit against two former prison guards who published a newsletter mocking his ability to do his job.

According to court testimony, Justin and Crystal Partridge, a married couple, published the newsletter, called the BCC Gazette, in 2002.

In the newsletter, the Partridges told jokes about their acting deputy warden, Steven Hay.

Justice Earl Johnstone released a written judgment this week, stating that “there was some malice” in the newsletter. He agreed that message board discussions about the publication on the Internet were an aggravating factor.

Johnstone ordered that the couple pay $35,000 in general and aggravated damages, plus $6,500 in court costs.

The Partridges, who have moved to Alberta, did not show up in court for any scheduled appearances.


November 19, 2004

Cambridge works to banish repeat offenders

Leaders of the Kitikmeot Inuit Association want more control over convicted criminals coming in and out of their communities, and they’re taking their campaign to the federal government.

Bob Aknavigak, a KIA representative from Cambridge Bay, said he wants Nunavut MP Nancy Karetak-Lindell to help them prevent repeat offenders from returning to their communities.

“We only feel that it’s fair that our people, our women, and our children are safe,” Aknavigak said.

The campaign stems from Cambridge Bay council’s recent debate about kicking out Desmond Kaosoni, 22, who was recently charged with sexual assault with a weapon and other charges.

The debate about banishing repeat offenders also came up in Cambridge Bay in 2002, when residents were lobbying to ban David Nakashook from the community.

Aknavigak brought the community’s concern to Premier Paul Okalik during the Nunavut Tunngavik annual general meeting earlier this month, but Okalik said there was nothing his government could do because it fell under federal jurisdiction.


November 19, 2004

Woman of the Year: Elisapee Davidee

This spring’s Honorary Toonik has been recognized by Pauktuutit Inuit Women’s Association as Woman of the Year.

Elisapee Davidee was chosen for the award for her work in taking single mothers out on the land to gain confidence and traditional knowledge.

Pauktuutit also named the new board of directors, who will represent their regions for the next two years. They are:

  • Ataomie Blake, of Northwest River, Labrador
  • Minnie Etidloie of Kangiqsujuaq, Ungava Region
  • Leana Metuq of Inukjuak, Hudson Region
  • Akeego Ikidluak of Kimmirut, Baffin South Region
  • Mary Qulittalik of Igloolik, Baffin North Region
  • Rhoda Paliak-Angootialuk of Coral Harbour, Kivalliq Region
  • Jeannie Evalik of Cambridge Bay, Kitikmeot Region
  • Anita Pokiak of Tuktoyaktuk, Inuvialuit Region
  • Ovilu Goo-Doyle of Ottawa, non-northern director
  • April Anderson of Nain, youth director

The Board executive will remain the same until 2005, with Mary Palliser of Inukjuak at its helm along with vice president Mary Matoo of Coral Harbour and secretary-treasurer Annie Buchan of Taloyoak.


November 19, 2004

Kenojuak Ashevak shows in Toronto

One of Cape Dorset’s most well-known printmakers has a show on at the Feheley Fine Arts gallery in Toronto’s Yorkville district.

Kenojuak Ashevak presented drawings and sculptures along with her two sons, Adamie and Arnaqu, in a show called “Generations: Kenojuak and Onward.”

Kenojuak, 77, has shown art work internationally since 1959, and was featured in a National Film Board documentary called Eskimo Artist - Kenojuak in 1962.

She was recently commissioned to design a stained glass window for the chapel of Appleby College outside of Toronto.


November 19, 2004

NTI will fight feds to break stalemate: CEO warns

Nunavut’s land claim organization has upped the ante in their stalled efforts to get the federal government to speed up their implementation of land claim obligations.

John Lamb, Nunavut Tunngavik’s CEO, said in his annual report that his organization will start using legal and political means to force the federal government to meet their end of the deal.

He said they needed to apply more pressure to the department of Indian and Northern Affairs because they’d been dragging their feet since the last 10-year agreement on implementation expired last year.

Lamb noted that NTI’s wrangling with Ottawa contributed to an unexpected deficit a couple of years ago, adding to upwards of $500,000 in legal and consultant fees.

“That’s spending a lot of beneficiaries’ money,” he said.

Stephen Traynor, INAC’s acting regional director-general, said he was constantly reminding Ottawa of their “big... and small” obligations under the land claim.

“We’re trying to do our best and hopefully we will come to some sort of resolution in the next year,” he said.


November 19, 2004

INAC eyes larger presence in the Kitikmeot

The federal government’s largest department in Nunavut will consider expanding its offices into the Kitikmeot, depending on future mining activity and exploration, a federal spokesperson said.

Stephen Traynor, the acting regional director-general for Indian and Northern Affairs, was answering concerns from members of the Kitikmeot Regional Inuit Association that his department was too focused on activities in Iqaluit.

“We have no plan currently to put something there,” Traynor said. “In the next six to nine months, there may be an opportunity to put something there.”


November 19, 2004

Nunavummiut better off in NWT?

Premier Paul Okalik got an earful earlier this month when disgruntled Inuit leaders questioned why government services seemed to be more efficient before the creation of Nunavut.

Mary Inuktaluk, the Sanikiluaq representative for the Qikiqtani Inuit Association, told the premier after his presentation to Nunavut Tunngavik Inc.’s annual general meeting, that people are finding their health care and education systems have deteriorated since 1999.

Inuktaluk added that the government based in Yellowknife used to consult more with Inuit communities on legislation and policies, before the handover took place.

“Now that we’re Nunavut, we seem to have more problems than when we were the Northwest Territories,” Inuktaluk said in Inuktitut.

The new government also seems less able to deal with the rise in family violence and mental health needs, according to Dorothy Aglukark, a delegate from the Kivalliq.

“With family violence, we used to do a much better job in the past,” Aglukark said. “We need help. They need mental health workers in the communities.”

Okalik responded that the government was “trying”, and that it couldn’t be held responsible for all of the territory’s problems.


November 19, 2004

Communities will compete for bowhead whale hunt

Communities around the territory should start submitting applications now if they want to host the bowhead whale hunt next spring.

James Eetoolook, vice-president of Nunavut Tunngavik Inc., told delegates gathered in Rankin Inlet earlier this month that all communities are eligible for the hunt. But he suggested that Resolute may be less likely to host the hunt because they were awarded it before.


November 19, 2004

Premier rejects education and health board revival

Premier Paul Okalik resisted any push to reinstate regional education and health boards during his speech to NTI’s annual general assembly in Rankin Inlet earlier this month.

Kitikmeot Inuit Association president Charlie Evalik asked the premier to revive the more localized administration of health and education because he feels communities need more decision-making power.

Okalik refused, saying that the boards were “past their time.”

“Our focus is on providing more support to our teachers and our health workers, not more administration,” he said.


November 19, 2004

NTI putting Inuit businesses under microscope

Nunavut Tunngavik’s main lending agency, Atuqtuarvik Corp., will soon create a snapshot of Inuit-run business, showing their strengths and weaknesses.

Atuqtuarvik staff hope to complete a survey of at least half of all companies listed on the territorial government’s Inuit firm registry by next month.

The survey will show what Inuit businesses are doing in various industries, and identify their financial downfalls, with hopes of developing an investment plan for the next five years.

The survey was ordered at NTI’s annual general meeting in Sanikiluaq last year.


November 19, 2004

NTI wants guidelines for Qallunaat adopting Inuit children

Nunavut Tunngavik is working on guidelines for making sure adopted Inuit children keep in touch with their culture.

Inuit leaders peppered president Paul Kaludjak with questions about cross-cultural adoptions earlier this month during their general meeting in Rankin Inlet.

They wanted to know whether NTI was ensuring that Inuit children adopted to non-Inuit families were still getting contact with their traditional culture.

Kaludjak said NTI had been receiving calls about the topic, and was researching how to deal with it.

He said in an interview that a future policy should filter out non-Inuit families who might be trying to unfairly take advantage of the harvesting rights given to Inuit.

“Our job is to protect the rights of Inuit,” Kaludjak said. “And that’s what we’re doing.”


November 12, 2004

Rankin killer gets 14 years for manslaughter

A Nunavut court judge sentenced a former resident of Whale Cove last week to more than a decade in prison, after the man admitted to killing a Rankin Inlet woman last year.

Allen Kabvitok, 36, plead guilty to manslaughter, and confessed to strangling and then mutilating the body of Donna Kusugak in March, 2003.

Kabvitok was originally charged with first-degree murder, a charge that was later downgraded to second-degree murder.

After hearing Kabvitok’s guilty plea, Justice Ted Scanlan sentenced him to 14 years in prison, with no eligibilty for parole for seven years.

He also ordered Kabvitok to submit a DNA sample to a federal registry, and extended the ban on his use of firearms.


November 12, 2004

Baffin mayors meet in Iqaluit

Mayors from across the Baffin will meet in Iqaluit next week to discuss community issues, concerns and challenges.

The Baffin Mayors Forum will take place Nov. 16 - 18 at the Navigator Inn.


November 12, 2004

Northern Lights creep south

Last Sunday, the dancing lights of the aurora borealis were visible as far south as Oklahoma, the Seattle Times reports.

The light show was caused by an “extreme geomagnetic storm,” said John Sahr, an associate professor of electrical engineering at the University of Washington.

Cosmic weather causing such a storm is not unusual. Solar activity takes place on an 11-year cycle. The most recent cycle peaked last year, bringing unusual magnetic activity with it.

High solar winds can force charged particles from space into the atmosphere. The northern lights appear when these particles oxygen and nitrogen molecules 20 to 200 miles above the planet.

The northern lights are visible in Seattle several times a year, but are usually hidden by clouds.


November 12, 2004

Rights tribunal goes to Coral Harbour

Nunavut’s new human rights tribunal will be located in Coral Harbour, premier and justice minister Paul Okalik announced this past Friday.

The new chair of the tribunal will be Gela Oolayou Pitsiulak, originally of Kimmirut and now living in Iqaluit. Sue Cooper of Iqaluit will be vice-chair.

Tribunal members include Louise Haulli of Igloolik, Aime Ahegona of Kugluktuk and Robert Tookoome, originally from Baker Lake and now living in Iqaluit. Marion Love is interim executive director.

The human rights tribunal stems from the Nunavut Human Rights Act passed in the legislature one year ago.

Members of the tribunal will balance Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit with Canadian laws to make sure that everyone is treated equally in Nunavut. The tribunal will mediate conflicts involving harassment or discrimination, and may also educate the public about their rights.

To contact the tribunal, call 1-800-413-6478.


November 12, 2004

Boy charged with attempted murder

A teenager faces a charge of attempted murder after a 26-year-old woman was found stabbed in a home in Cambridge Bay earlier this week.

RCMP responded to a call about an attack around 5 a.m. on Sunday. The woman, who received multiple stab wounds, first went to the health centre, then was medivaced to Yellowknife, where she was treated for non-life-threatening injuries.

Shortly after the call, police arrested a 16-year-old boy in relation to the incident.

The teen will appear in court in Iqaluit on Nov. 15.


November 12, 2004

Booze, dope seized at Iqaluit post office

An RCMP crack-down on bootleg booze and drugs coming into Nunavut through the Iqaluit post office recently turned up large amounts of marijuana and liquor.

Using a police dog, the RCMP drug squad seized more than three kilograms of pot and about 100 bottles of booze, during searches conducted from Oct. 18-23.

No arrests have been made, but police say investigations are on-going.


November 12, 2004

Inuit applaud Canadian North discount, ask for more

Canadian North will pay half the price of one return ticket for any Inuit passengers flying with the airline over the next year.

Airline executives announced the discount while giving an update on their finances at the Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. annual general meeting last week.

“It’s a thank-you for our shareholders,” said Christy Brewster, the airline’s northern community relations officer. “It’s basically because we’re in a healthy position that we can give something back.”

But some NTI delegates said the airline still needs to do more, complaining that the company doesn’t service Arctic Bay or Sanikiluaq. They added a request that the company change routes so customers don’t have to fly through Iqaluit as much.

The airline’s executive said they can’t afford to open new routes, but pledged to visit smaller communities over the next year to listen to their concerns.

Brewster also said that the airline would look at resurrecting their now-defunct family airfare.


November 5, 2004

More flights for Baffin communities

This week, First Air took its new ATR 42-300 turboprop to Clyde River and Iqaluit where it invited members of the public to check out the faster, brighter, roomier aircraft.

The ATR 42-300s, which can carry a combination of passengers and cargo and land on ice or gravel runways, replace the aging fleet of 748s.

The new planes will fly six times a week to Clyde River and Pond Inlet starting on Nov. 15 and to Hall Beach and Igloolik starting early in 2005, upping the number of weekly connections through to Ottawa from the communities from 18 to 28.

But the new planes won’t be able to land in Panniqtuuq until an estimated $27 million of work is done to extend its cramped runway.


November 5, 2004

Coral Harbour teen charged in Winnipeg killing

Officers from the Winnipeg police homicide unit traveled to Coral Harbour last weekend to apprehend a 16-year old in connection with the bludgeoning death of Brian Alexander Wellard, a retired Winnipegger, the Winnipeg Sun reports.

Wellard’s decomposing body was found in his appartment on the morning of Sept. 20. An autopsy confirmed that he died of blunt trauma.

Police had released the victim’s photo to the media and made a public plea for leads in the case. Last month, after identifying a suspect, investigators consulted the Crown attorney’s office, and on Oct. 18, the Crown authorized a Canada-wide arrest warrant for the person on a charge of second-degree murder.

A 16-year-old boy was arrested last weekend at his father’s home in Coral Harbour. Investigators returned to Winnipeg this past Monday with the boy, who was detained at the Manitoba Youth Centre.

Wellard, a retired school bus driver, was a volunteer handyman at the Nine Circles Community Health Centre, a clinic that provides support for people who are HIV-positive or affected by AIDS.

 


November 5, 2004

HTO lobbies against dragging

Koalie Kooneeliusie, chairman of Qikiqtarjuaq’s Nattivak Hunters and Trappers Association board, and its secretary-treasurer, Samuel Nuqingaq, are not happy about the practice of dragging for fish by trawlers in the fishing zones OA and OB off Baffin Island.

The pair recently met in Ottawa with Nunavut Member of Parliament Nancy Karetak-Lindell and Jose Kusugak, president of the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, to discuss the issue.

Factory trawlers drag nets across the ocean floor for shrimp and other fish. The process has a kind of vacuum effect.

“The ocean floor is being destroyed by net dragging,” Kusuhak said, “This is an issue that is vital to confront, and we must discuss it, and obtain a mandate from you to be able to communicate the nature of the issue to the government of Canada in order to preserve our way of life and the environment.”

Kusugak said he intended to speak out against the practice at the Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. annual general meeting in Rankin Inlet this week.


November 5, 2004

Fancy yellow sapphires on Baffin

True North Gems has announced the discovery of yellow, clear and pale blue fancy coloured sapphires from its Beluga sapphire property near Kimmirut. In August, 80 pieces of fancy coloured sapphire rough were discovered and collected by Seemeega Aqpik, a co-discoverer of the Beluga property, and colleague Tony Le Cheminant.

In all, 12 finished stones with a total weight of 6.56 carats were polished. The largest, a fancy yellow oval, weighed 1.47 carats. Photos of the polished goods can be seen on True North’s Web site at www.truenorthgems.com.

November 5, 2004

Copter crash claims one life

A three-day drama started to unfold last Saturday, when RCMP in Taloyoak were called about a Canadian Helicopters crash near the Distance Early Warning site at Shepherd’s Bay, about a three-hour snowmobile ride south of the community.

The Bell-212 helicopter had apparently taken off toward Gjoa Haven in whiteout conditions shortly after noon.

The crash killed pilot Jack Bhanwer, 47, one of the five people on board. Survivors walked to the nearby DEW line site to report the incident.

A rescue helicopter was sent to the scene from Hall Beach, but was forced to return to Kugaaruk due to poor visibility. A ground search team was organized in Taloyoak, but could not leave the community due to the increasing blizzard conditions and nightfall.

Early Saturday evening, two search and rescue technicians, called SAR techs, parachuted to the site from a Hercules aircraft that had been sent up from Winnipeg.

Finally, on Sunday morning, the helicopter left Kugaaruk and was able to land at the site. However, it was unable to leave due to a blizzard.

On Monday, the rescue helicopter was able to leave the site and bring the injured to the community. They were later taken to Winnipeg on the Hercules.

The survivors of the crash included the co-pilot and three employees of Nasittuq Corporation that has the contract to operate and maintain the unmanned radar sites of the North Warning System for the Department of National Defense.

RCMP and transportation safety investigators and a coroner visited the crash scene. Following their investigation, they returned to Taloyoak with the deceased and the SAR techs.


November 5, 2004

Nunavut weather a record-breaker

Last Saturday, Resolute Bay hit a record low of -31.3 C, surpassing the previous low of -30.7 C set in 1978 for this date.

On Monday, Resolute Bay hit a record of -32.7 C, surpassing the previous low of -31.0 C for Oct. 31.

Meanwhile, Iqaluit has set a record high for its temperatures on Oct. 29. Last Friday, it was 3.4 C, surpassing the previous high of 2.8 C for Oct. 29.

November 5, 2004

Elders complain about court system

Two representatives of the Qikiqtani Inuit Association raised concerns about elders in the justice system to Premier Paul Okalik, who is also the Government of Nunavut’s minister of justice.

Elders are frequently invited to present their opinions before sentencing at trials, but Piujuq Enoogoo, the community director for Arctic Bay, is concerned that “they are just being used.”

“The elders are listened to but they don’t have any say,” Enoogoo said.

Gamailie Kilukishak, the QIA’s elders’ representative, had a similar concern. Kilukishak wants to see a system where elders and judges have equal power.

“Before the white man came, Inuit treated people differently than today’s culture,” Kilukishak said. “Elders can offer counsel and forgiveness.”

Kilukishak was also concerned about the timing of trials and how it affected the elders involved.

“They extend the courts on and on,” he said.


November 5, 2004

QIA hears ups and downs from women and youth

A report submitted by Neeve Uttaq of Igloolik, the women’s representative to the Qikiqtani Inuit Association, was short: a few meetings attended and limited activity due to the educational leave of QIA’s women’s coordinator, Jean Kigutikarjuk.

Board members suggested more collaboration with Pauktuutit and undertaking specific projects for the women’s department.

Youth director Eric Nutarariaq of Igloolik outlined the four main youth activities of the QIA: the Baffin Regional Youth Council annual general meeting, a suicide prevention video, the founding of the Isaksimagit Inuusirmi Katujjiqatigiit Embrace Life Council and the Sprouts program that linked youth with kids in Iqaluit in the summer of 2003.


November 5, 2004

Shopping bags plague Nunavut

“Shopping bags, I’ve said it before, are a danger to the environment,” said Loasie Audlakiak, the Qikiqtani Inuit Association’s director for Qikiqtarjuak, at the QIA’s annual general meeting in Iqaluit last Thursday.

“There have been a number of outboard motors that broke down because of these plastic bags,” Audlakiak said. “They could be dangerous to animals.”

Audlakiak raised his concern to Olayuk Akeysuk, Nunavut’s environment minister, who heard the same issue raised during the spring session of the Legislative Assembly.

“In 2005 we will introduce legislation or a pamphlet to provide public information,” Akeysuk said.

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