January 6, 2006
Top 10 Nunavik stories in 2005
Murders, accidents, elections and very strange weather
NUNATSIAQ NEWS
Maggie Emudluk: First woman to head the KRG
Maggie Emudluk is the first woman president of the Kativik Regional Government.
(FILE PHOTO)
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During its November meeting, the Kativik Regional Council elected Maggie Emudluk
to lead the organization for the next two years.
Emudluk became the first woman to head Nunaviks regional government,
which employs about 300 employees in 14 communities.
Emudluk beat out Michael Gordon, the former mayor of Kuujjuaq, to replace the
departing Johnny Adams. Emudluk, who admitted shed never yet lost an election,
said she was nonetheless surprised by the result.
Its good for women, Emudluk said, and that Im an Inuk.
37 C in Kuujjuaraapik
Temperatures in the Eastern Hudson Bay community of Kuujjuaraapik hit 36.6
C on July 11, making Kuujjuaraapik the hottest place in Quebec that day and
breaking the previous record of 29.4 C set in 1969.
But July 12 was even hotter. The days high climbed to 37 C, breaking
the previous record high of 28.3 C set in 1998. These temperatures were much
higher than the normal temperature range of 15 C.
Environment Canada meteorologist René Héroux said Kuujjuaraapiks
heat wave was extremely unusual.
It was very unusual, and will it happen again? Well, we can certainly
say that its another indication climate change is no joke, Héroux
said.
Huge bust smashes drug pipeline
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Police stand in front
of some of the drugs and money netted in Project Crystal. (FILE
PHOTO)
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On May 31, at about 6 a.m., police swooped down on 45 suspected drug traffickers
in Nunavut, Nunavik and Montreal, breaking up a drug ring that netted $250,000
a week in drug sales.
The police round-up included Inuit and non-Inuit, old and young, men and women,
husbands and wives, in 12 Nunavut and Nunavik communities and in Montreal.
Every week, local pushers sent their collected cash back south by cheque and
money order. Sometimes they found a local courier who would carry down the money,
taped to their bodies or stuffed into boxes.
The money, $125,000 to $250,000 a week, allowed the alleged kingpin of the
operation, Mike aka Marcello Ruggiero, 39, and his buddies to acquire
luxurious mansions and drive around in posh sports cars and SUVs.
Some 200 police officers from the Aboriginal Combined Forces Special Enforcement
Unit were involved in the special operation known as Project Crystal.
A year full of murders
Claude Bourget, a veteran employee of the KRG, was killed on Feb. 2 at his home
in Kuujjuaq. (FILE PHOTO)
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In 2005 there were five homicides and a handful of attempted murders in Nunavik,
making this a record year for serious violence in the region.
Among those who died violently, at the hands of others, was Claude Bourget,
a long-term resident of Kuujjuaq. Bourget was an employee of the Kativik Regional
Government where he worked as a senior accounting clerk in the finance department.
Bourget died from injuries he received during a beating and torture session,
which cause an agonizingly painful death from a hockey stick thrust up through
his rectum.
Three young Kuujjuaq men were arrested and two received life sentences in November.
The third will return to court in January, 2006.
School violence shuts schools
Following a brutal attack on the principal on Jan. 13, Arsaniq School in
Kangiqsujuaq closed down for three and a half days.
Then, a month later, Peter Keatainak, 18, shot an adult education teacher with
the Kativik School Board in the neck. Hassina Kerfi-Guetteb, 43, was seriously
injured. Keatainak then shot and killed himself.
Police investigators who traveled to Salluit following the incident concluded
that the attempted murder-suicide was an act of desperate vengeance: Keatainak
had been expelled from the adult education program earlier this year after he
assaulted another student.
Quebecs teachers union, the Fédération des sydicats
de lenseignement, passed a resolution in support of the demands of Northern
Quebec Teachers Association and teachers in Salluit and Kangiqsujuaq, calling
for concrete solutions to prevent more violence in the schools.
Beluga quota overshot
Salluit hunters landed 22 beluga whales on a single day last July in the
Hudson Strait, double the quota that they had agreed to.
Nunaviks mayors had decided to split the Hudson Straits beluga
quota of 135 equally among the 14 communities, so each community would be able
to hunt 11 belugas in the Hudson Strait.
In the end, Salluit recorded 23, Ivujivik, 37, and Akulivik, 28.
The quota of 135 has now been widely overtaken, wrote Michel Tremblay,
the regional director of the DFOs aboriginal fisheries division, to the
mayors in November.
Another 21 belugas were hunted in areas lying outside the zones agreed on in
the 2005 Beluga Management Plan five in Ungava Bay, closed to all hunting;
one from the Eastern Hudson Bay, also closed to all hunting; three more than
the quota for Long Island and James Bay, and 12 from the Belcher and King George
Islands.
ATV accidents raise concern over off-road vehicle safety
Horrific accidents involving all-terrain vehicles took place in Nunavik
last summer, every week, at all hours of the day, in each community, causing
serious injuries and death.
The Kativik Regional Government and Makivik Corporation called for action.
The two organizations leaders handed Quebecs transport minister
a copy of a brief, entitled Off-highway vehicles in Nunavik, during
consultations on off-road vehicles held in Kuujjuaq and Kangiqsualujjuaq.
This brief asks for Quebecs law on off-highway vehicles and the highway
safety code to be amended so police can start enforcing rules that are adapted
to the region. It also called for a regional office of la Société
dAssurance automobile du Québec.
Nunavik lends help to tsunami victims
Nunavimmiut raised tens of thousands of dollars for those affected by the
tsunami on Dec. 26, showing their generous spirit towards those in need.
A bingo in Kuujjuaq featured prizes donated by local businesses and airlines.
The event raised thousands of dollars for the Red Cross. Students at Jaanimmarik
School continued to fundraise until the end of January.
In Inukjuak, a garage sale, where items sold for $1 a piece, jumpstarted the
communitys ambitious fundraising campaign, while in Kangiqsualujjuaq,
efforts to help the tsunami relief drive brought back memories of the communitys
lethal avalanche of Jan. 1, 1999 and the outpouring of concern after that tragedy.
Inuulitsivik teeters at the edge
Puvirnituqs Inuulitsivik Hospital came close to collapse, strained
by financial burdens, administrative chaos and conflicts.
With its top management gutted, essential medical positions vacant or in flux
and a stressed and angry staff, many asked why Quebecs health and social
services department didnt step in and help restore order in Inuulitsivik.
By the end of 2005, both the president of the board and the hospitals
executive director had been relieved of their duties.
The Inuulitsivik health board has 400 employees working at health and social
services clinics in seven Hudson Bay communities, at the rehabilitation center
in Inukjuak, and at the Inuulitsivik Hospital in Puvirnituq.
Nunavik claims offshore islands
In November, the Nunavik Inuit land claims Agreement for offshore regions
was initialed in Montreal, although Nunavimmiut must now ratify the agreement
and the federal cabinet approve the deal before it takes effect.
The agreement states that Nunavik would:
- own 80 per cent of all the islands in the Nunavik Marine Region;
- get $86 million in capital transfers and funds;
- participate in co-management regimes to address wildlife, land management
and environmental issues;
- have guaranteed rights in northern Labrador;
- participate in the management and development of the proposed Torngat Mountains
National Park;
- and earn a share in any resource royalties accruing to government from development
activities in the Nunavik Marine Region.
The agreement also confirms overlap arrangements between Nunavik Inuit and
the Crees of Eeyou Istchee, Labrador Inuit and Nunavut Inuit.
We are glad to finally be able to say that we will now own 80 per cent
of our islands, and though we will not own the other 20 per cent of the islands
we will still have access to these islands, Pita Aatami, president of
Makivik Corporation, said in a news release issued after the signing.
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