|
Around Nunavut
October 14, 2005
New board for Canadian Polar Commission
This week, Andy Scott, federal minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, announced new appointments to the Canadian Polar Commission board of directors for 2005 - 2008.
“I am pleased that all these extraordinary people have agreed to serve on the Canadian Polar Commission,” Scott said.
Four of the appointments are individuals with connection to Nunavik or Nunavut:
- New vice-chairperson François Trudel, a professor of anthropology at the University of Laval, has been involved in research projects with Nunavut Arctic College and Iqaluit Elders’ Society since 2000;
- New director Gordon Miles lives in Iqaluit, where he is the manager of business services for the Kakivak Association;
- • New director Susan Rowley is an assistant professor and curator of public archaeology for the Museum of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, and has more than 30 years of experience in archaeology and anthropology across the Arctic. Some of Ms. Rowley’s most recent fieldwork includes a collaborative project with the Inuit Heritage Trust and the community of Repulse Bay;
- New director Jocelyn Barrett of Kuujjuaq has been a legal advisor to the Makivik Corporation in Kuujjuaq since 1998. Barrett has also been a member of Quebec Bar Association Committee on Law and Aboriginal Peoples for nearly five years.
Tom Hutchinson is the Canadian Polar Commission’s new chair. The commission is Canada’s lead agency in the area of polar science.
October 14, 2005
Two murder trial dates set
Mark King Jeffrey, the man accused of killing a 13-year-old girl in Iqaluit well over three years ago, is to stand trial by jury, but he won’t appear in court for almost another year.
His trial date is set for Sept. 11, 2006.
Police arrested and charged Jeffrey with first-degree murder in March 2003, in connection with the death of Jennifer Naglingiq, whose body was found a few minutes after midnight on Dec. 6, 2002.
News of Naglingniq’s death traumatized the community and overshadowed a vigil held that December at Inuksuk High School to mark the 13th anniversary of the 1989 Montreal massacre. Staff at Inuksuk High School, where Naglingniq was a Grade 8 student, worked round the clock after her death to provide emotional support for the school’s 460 students.
Jeffrey’s trial was expected to be set for sometime in 2005, but it was delayed several times. Among the reasons for the delays were waits for the results of DNA tests.
Adrien VanEindhoven is scheduled to face a jury trial on March 27, 2006, in Rankin Inlet for second-degree murder.
VanEindhoven, 31, is charged in connection with the death of 22-year-old Leanne Irkotee, who died in late April 2004 inside the Rankin Inlet health centre.
Police found a badly-injured Irkotee inside a Rankin Inlet residence around 7:30 a.m. on April 23, after getting a call from someone who said Irkotee needed medical attention. They arrived with an ambulance and took the young woman to the health centre, where she was pronounced dead several hours later.
October 14, 2005
Nuvaqiq chooses jury trial
The man charged with the brutal beating of a woman in Pangnirtung this summer has chosen to be tried by jury.
Tommy Nuvaqiq appeared in court in Iqaluit on Oct. 4. The 23-year-old Pangnirtung resident faces charges of attempted murder, aggravated sexual assault and break and enter with intent to commit an indictable offense. Police arrested Nuvaqiq on July 16.
Nuvaqiq is to appear in court next on Nov. 15 to set a date for his preliminary inquiry. A preliminary inquiry is held to determine if there is enough evidence to go to trial.
The 31-year-old victim of the attack is recovering at her Nova Scotia home.
October 7, 2005
Boost legal aid, lawyers urge feds
The Canadian Bar Association is calling on the federal government to boost funding for legal aid in the next federal budget.
The CBA, a national association of lawyers, also wants that federal money to be tied to the amount being spent by each provincial or territorial government.
Legal aid is an especially important service in Nunavut because of a “presumed eligibility” policy. That is, anyone in Nunavut who is charged with an offence is automatically entitled to free service from the Maliiganik Tukisiiniakvik legal aid clinic.
October 7, 2005
Ottawa to host forum on violence against aboriginal women
A policy forum to discuss violence against aboriginal women will be held in Ottawa in the early spring.
Ministers responsible for the status of women committed to the idea of the forum when they met in Regina in late September. They say the forum will be an opportunity for aboriginal women to speak about their experiences and challenges, and their stories will help shape future government policy.
National aboriginal women’s organizations agree that government researchers and policy makers should actually meet and speak with aboriginal women themselves.
October 7, 2005
Two plead guilty to bloody assault
Two young Iqaluit residents pleaded guilty to aggravated assault charges in court this week.
The charges date back to early August, when RCMP discovered a 28-year-old man bleeding from multiple stab wounds near the Arnakadlak building, in the early morning of Aug 1.
The victim had surgery in the Baffin Regional Hospital for stab wounds to his stomach and neck.
Douglas Katsak, 18, and Jason Kilabuk, 21, were both charged with aggravated assault, attempted murder and robbery.
They’re to appear in court next for pre-sentencing reports on Nov. 14.
October 7, 2005
Harper named Danish honorary consul
Kenn Harper, the Iqaluit historian, businessman, former teacher, and Nunatsiaq News columnist, was named Denmark’s honourary consul for Nunavut last week by Poul Erik Kristensen, Denmark’s ambassador to Canada.
In an interview with Embassy an weekly Ottawa newsmagazine that covers diplomatic and foreign policy issues, Kristensen said the purpose of Denmark’s new consulate in Nunavut is to develop circumpolar co-operation and to maintain cultural ties between Nunavut and Greenland.
In the same article, Harper said one of his priorities will be to work towards the restoration of scheduled air services between Iqaluit and Nuuk.
Greenlandair pulled out of the route in the fall of 2001, and at the same time, First Air decided that they couldn’t afford to offer a scheduled Iqaluit-Nuuk service on its own.
Since then, travellers going to Nuuk from Iqaluit have been forced to either use expensive charters, or take a circuitous route through Ottawa, Boston, Reykjavik, and then Greenland.
Kristensen said fisheries, polar bear conservation, sustainable energy and the environment are other areas that the new honorary consulate will work on.
October 7, 2005
Flu shots for all Nunavummiut
Anyone in Nunavut who wants a flu shot may now get one from the GN’s health department this winter.
Until now, the GN has offered flu vaccinations to those at risk: infants, older people, people with chronic lung diseases, and people with weak immune systems.
In healthy people, the flu is rarely fatal, though it can make them sick for a week to 10 days.
But for those at risk, the flu can lead to worse diseases, such as pneumonia, and can cause life-threatening complications.
In a press release issued this week, the GN now says they’re offering “universal coverage” to reduce the effect of influenza on families and on the economy.
Until now, about 40 per cent of Nunavut’s population has been vaccinated annually.
October 7, 2005
Healthy stores project moves ahead in Cambridge Bay
The Ikaluktutiak Co-op and the Northern Store have agreed to take part in a new program to make healthy food cheaper and more accessible to people in Cambridge Bay.
Dr. Joel Gittelson from the John Hopkins School for Public Health was in Cambridge for the second time last month to prepare community members to do groundwork for the program, called Healthy Stores.
The project works by asking grocery store owners to increase the healthy foods on their shelves. Then, in exchange for them agreeing to stock those foods, the project leaders agree to promote them through educational displays, cooking demonstrations, recipes, special labels, and the local media.
Gittelson is training two people to do interviews to help with planning the project’s first locations in Cambridge and Taloyoak.
If successful, the program could eventually be expanded to other communities in Nunavut.
October 7, 2005
Mining companies not eligible for food mail
As of Oct. 1, mining companies, construction crews, exploration camps and weather stations are officially booted off the eligibility list for the national food mail subsidy.
Food mail allows northern food stores and individuals to ship nutritious perishable foods, healthy non-perishable food and essential non-food items like detergent and shampoo at a reduced cargo rate.
In the past, mines voluntarily refrained from accessing the program, but in recent years, a DIAND press release says, some suppliers in the South have begun offering direct food mail shipments to government and business outposts, and others have inquired as to whether it’s allowed.
“Canada Post asked for some clarification on that because some businesses were wondering if they could ship to mines,” said Fred Hill, manager of northern food security for the department of Indian Affairs in Ottawa.
“That isn’t the intent of the program and those direct shipments should not be allowed.”
October 7, 2005
Bookkeeping program proposed
The Baffin Regional Chamber of Commerce plans to push for the development of a bookkeeping program offered through Nunavut Arctic College.
The end goal would be to have a bookkeeper in every community, so that small businesses like local outfitters have someone to help keep their finances straight, said Bob Long from the chamber.
The decision came from meetings held during the summer. The next step will be to hire a consultant to develop the curriculum, which could then be pitched to the Nunavut Arctic College as a course.
Other initiatives of the chamber include plans to resurrect the Baffin Business Directory by the trade show next spring, and to plan a rotating trade show through the communities that would target high school students, encouraging them to become business people, not bureaucrats. It would be held every two months over the next two years.
“It would be like a traveling road show,” Long said.
October 7, 2005
It’s sun transit time
Northwestel issued a press release this week reminding people that for every day between Oct. 5 and Oct. 18, people in northern communities will see short-lived disruptions in telecommunications.
It’s caused by a phenomenon called “sun transit,” and occurs every spring and fall.
When satellites pass directly between the earth and the sun, natural radio frequencies from the sun overpower signals sent out by satellites.
The disruptions, which will occur for a few minutes every day between now and Oct. 18, affect long distance telephone service, internet and satellite television. Local phone services aren’t affected.
October 7, 2005
GN appoints new IQ advisory council
The Government of Nunavut appointed the second council of the Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit Katimajiit.
The role of the council is to provide advice to the government so its operations reflect Inuit traditional knowledge.
The newly appointed members are: Elik Tologanak of Cambridge Bay; Arnaoyok Alookee of Taloyoak; Jimmy Muckpak of Arviat; Simon Nattaq of Iqaluit; Percy Pikuyak of Hall Beach; Cecelia Angotialuk of Repulse Bay; Jaycopie Ikalujuaq of Clyde River; and Peeturusi Kaapi of Pangnirtung.
Louis Tapardjuk, minister of culture, language, elders and youth, made the announcement on Sept. 7.
TOP
|