April 7, 2006
Released from hospital,
hunger striker heads to Iqaluit
Four years later, Frances
Mazhero still wants to clear his name from false allegations of sexual abuse
SARA
MINOGUE
Today
is day 51 of Frances Mazhero's hunger strike. (FILE PHOTO)
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A hunger striker whose
dramatic protest in Chesterfield Inlet has received little attention flew to
Iqaluit this week, to continue his campaign against the "inhumane"
treatment he alleges to have received from the Federation of Nunavut Teachers
and the Government of Nunavut.
Shaking off false accusations
of sexual abuse have proved impossible for Frances Mazhero, who was fired from
Victor Sammurtok School in Chesterfield Inlet after just one year on the job,
when a Grade 9 student accused him of inappropriate touching.
The accusations were later
retracted, and the principal who initially upheld the false allegations was
fired, then rehired at another Nunavut school.
But the story continues
for Mazhero, who launched a volley of lawsuits starting with the Government
of Nunavut and the Federation of Nunavut Teachers and reaching all the way to
individual GN workers and even an arbitrator who selected to help resolve the
case.
Three lawsuits remain in
limbo - suspended until Mazhero posts security for court costs, as ordered by
a Nunavut court judge selected to wade through a mountain of paperwork from
him.
Mazhero is now pinning
his hopes on an arbitration hearing for his defamation grievance with the teachers
union. That hearing was delayed when Mazhero rejected his appointed lawyer,
and demanded the union pay for a new lawyer.
The union agreed to that
demand, and, according to a judges ruling offered $25,000 for Mazhero to hire
a lawyer of his choice, if he agreed to stop his court actions. Mazhero rejected
that offer, and now denies the offer was ever made, and accuses the lawyer who
conveyed the offer of fraud and corruption.
"I want a meeting,
where we should set a date for arbitration, period," he said. He also suggested
a former judge should preside over the proceedings - ideally, the former chief
justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia.
At this point, Mazhero
said he will represent himself, "if I make it."
On Tuesday, Mazhero flew
to Rankin Inlet to prepare for a trip to the capital, despite his weak physical
state.
He spent Monday to Friday
last week in a hospital in Churchill, where doctors did all they could to help
the emaciated man take fluids, which he can no longer consume on his own.
For the first month of
his hunger strike, Mazhero drank only water and orange juice. Since then, he
has consumed only water and gastrolyte, an anti-diarrhea drug.
Mazhero told this newspaper
he would be heading to the Oqota men's shelter for a bed
upon arrival on Wednesday
(also Nunatsiaq News deadline.) If no space was available, he said, he would
camp outside the GN's justice department offices.
Mazhero is prepared to
fight for his lonely cause to the bitter end.
"I will not leave
Iqaluit unless my health gives up, or they meet my demands."
Mazhero makes frequent
reference to 10 Northern Irish hunger strikers who starved themselves to death
in a British prison in 1981. The prisoners were members of the Irish Republican
Army and the Irish National Liberation Army who demanded to be treated as political
prisoners.
Before and after photographs
of each prisoner are included in a 57-page coil-bound pack of documents Mazhero
sent to Education Minister Ed Picco and the president of the Federation of Nunavut
Teachers, Jimmy Jacquard, on March 21.
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