July 14, 2006
Absence of air link
could ground Nunavut-Greenland trade deal
"I feel that I
am banging my head against the wall."
ARTHUR
JOHNSON
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Olayuk
Akesuk, Nunavut's economic development minister, greets Hans Enoksen, the premier
of Greenland, whose delegation made it to Iqaluit from Nuuk via the only means
possible: an expensive charter flight. (PHOTOS BY JIM BELL)
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It was, as these things
go, a distinguished gathering.
Poul Kristensen, the Danish
ambassador to Canada, flew up from Ottawa. Premier Paul Okalik showed up with
an entourage from the Government of Nunavut, including his press secretary.
Iqaluit Mayor Elisapee Sheutiapik was there, along with officials from the Baffin
Fishing Coalition, Nunavut Tourism, and a few other local business people.
Together with Kenn Harper,
the man of the hour, they waited patiently in the lobby of the Nunavut legislature
for more than an hour on Saturday for a delegation from Greenland that included
Premier Hans Enoksen and representatives from three of Greenland's top companies.
The people from Greenland
were late because their charter flight was delayed. They couldn't take a regular
flight to Iqaluit, or for that matter, to anywhere else in Canada from Greenland,
because there isn't one.
That made the gathering,
whose purpose was to mark, belatedly, Harper's appointment as Danish honorary
consul in Iqaluit and for the two premiers to officially pledge to strengthen
trade ties between Greenland and Nunavut, a little surreal.
Despite the best efforts
of the premiers and the ambassador to make the occasion an upbeat celebration
of the common trade, historical and cultural ties between Nunavut and Greenland,
the unhappy reality of the missing air link kept intruding.
After the politicians and
the ambassador made pleasant remarks about the warm relationship between Canada
and Denmark and Nunavut and Greenland and heaped accolodates on Harper, the
honorary consul himself broke the spell with his unvarnished, unstatesmanlike
observations about his frustrating efforts to get someone - anyone - interested
in making regular flights between Iqaluit and Nuuk.
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Paul
Okalik, the Nunavut premier, and Hans Enoksen, the Greenland premier, sign a
new trade agreement this past Saturday. Itis not clear how the deal will ever
be carried out, given the absence of a scheduled airline service between Canada
and Greenland.
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"I've been pushing
hard to get to anybody and everybody, any airline that will listen to me about
re-establishing an air link," Harper said. "I feel that I am banging
my head against the wall."
Harper said that he agreed
to take on the job of Danish honorary consul last year on the understanding
that he would be "outspoken" on the air link issue. Judging by his
remarks on Saturday, Harper, an Iqaluit businessman, historian and Nunatsiaq
News columnist, seems prepared to make the air link a full time campaign.
He said that governments
in Greenland and Nunavut have made it clear they will not help finance regular
air service between the two regions.
But he said, "We need
a weekly flight where anybody off the street can get to Greenland from Nunavut
or from Nunavut to Greenland."
For this to happen, he
said, both governments have to "take an interest in getting the link re-established."
Regular air service between Nunavut and Greenland ended in 2001 when First Air
decided to end its flights.
Harper said he has been
visiting Greenland regularly since the 1970s, when he was a teacher in Arctic
Bay and encountered his first visitors from Greenland, two hunters who came
over the ice by dog team to Grise Fiord and then flew to his community.
The following year, he
organized a charter flight from Arctic Bay to Greenland. A group of people from
Greenland then made a return visit to Arctic Bay. Harper said he came to like
Greenland so much that he eventually married two women from Greenland and had
two daughters, one of whom still lives there.
Harper, who has succeeded
as a teacher, real estate investor, merchant and writer, may find an even greater
challenge advocating for a Nunavut-Greenland air line.
Officials from First Air
and Canadian North were formally invited to Saturday's gathering. No one from
either airline bothered to show up.
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