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Around Nunavut

September 22, 2006

Romanian lands in Grise Fiord

On Sept. 18, RCMP constables in Grise Fiord arrested a 32-year old Romanian man under Canada’s immigration act, not long after he arrived in the community, cold and hungry, on an 18-foot fishing boat.

The RCMP says the man sailed alone from Greenland, leaving on Sept. 11.

After checking the man’s papers to clear him through customs, the RCMP learned that he had previously been deported from Canada in 2000. The man was apparently was on his way to Toronto, Ont. through Nunavut to avoid contact with the Canadian border officials.

The man, who speaks English fluently, was to have a hearing by telephone on Wednesday afternoon and then leave the next day to Resolute Bay.

Cpl. Ian Johnson of the Grise Fiord RCMP detachment said it’s not uncommon for foreign sailors on small boats to call at Nunavut communities, but they generally carry the proper paperwork necessary to pass immigration scrutiny.


September 22, 2006

Four vie for Tununiq seat

Residents of Pond Inlet will have four well-known candidates to choose from when they head to the polls Oct. 16 to elect a new member of the legislative assembly.

The election will fill the empty seat for Tunnuniq left by Jobie Nutarak, who died in a snowmobiling accident last April.

The candidates include James Arvaluk, Nunavut’s first education minister, and the former MLA for Nanulik, who resigned that seat in 2003 after he was convicted of assault in connection with an incident in Coral Harbour

Also in the race is Rhoda Arreak Cunningham, who was president of the Baffin Regional Chamber of Commerce prior to the formation of Nunavut.

Sam Omik is a former board member of the Qikiqtani Inuit Association, and a past vice-president of the Baffin Regional Inuit Association.

He also ran for this seat in 2004, only to finish at bottom of the pack in a four-way race that Jobie Nutarak won.

Joseph Krimmerdjuar is a well-known interpreter.

Elligible voters may cast their ballots at the returning officer’s office from Oct. 2-12, or they can wait until election day on the 16th, when ballots will be cast in Pond Inlet’s community hall.

A mobile poll is also planned for housebound residents, and mail-in ballots are available for those away from home during election day.


September 22, 2006

Ledge to host youth parliament in November

Nunavut’s first youth parliament will take place in Iqaluit from Nov. 6 to Nov. 10.

“The Nunavut youth parliament is an exciting opportunity for our youth to learn about our system of government while interacting with their peers from across the territory,” said Peter Kilabuk, the speaker of Nunavut’s legislature.

Students in Grades 9 to 11 are eligible to take part, says a news release, and 19 will be chosen to play the roles of Nunavut MLAs.

The costs of the young parliamentarians’ travel and accommodation will be paid by the legislative assembly, while schools and the assembly office will coordinate applications.

The youth parliament will be videotaped and students will receive a special commemorative edition of the daily hansard.


r 15, 2006

Court deals with pre-trial motions in Jeffrey case

The case of Mark King Jeffrey, a man accused of killing a 13-year-old Iqaluit girl more than three years ago, will be before the courts in Iqaluit for the next four weeks, but it will be several months before an actual trial begins.

Lawyers are expected to spend most of that time dealing with pre-trial issues related to the admissibility of various pieces of evidence.

Crown lawyer Susanne Boucher was expected to give an opening statement to the trial judge on Wednesday morning, but Boucher did not appear due to sickness, and the case was adjourned until Thursday, after this week’s press deadline for Nunatsiaq News.

Over the next four weeks, she is expected to call on more than 20 witnesses during consideration of various pre-trial motions.

The trial proper - the hearing of evidence before a jury - is not expected to begin for several months.

Jeffrey, 25, is charged with first-degree murder in the death of Jennifer Naglingiq, 13, whose body was found in the first few minutes after midnight on Dec. 6, 2002, at house 2230-B in Iqaluit.

The news of Naglingniq’s death on December 6, 2002 overshadowed a vigil held at Inuksuk High School to mark the 13th anniversary of the 1989 Montreal massacre.


September 8, 2006

European parliamentarians support seal ban

A majority of European Parliament members have voted yes to a proposal that is designed to halt the annual seal hunt in Canada, Greenland and Russia.

The declaration, which was not officially endorsed by the EU assembly, called on the EU’s European Commission to draft a ban “without delay.”

The declaration is sponsored by Caroline Lucas, a Green Party MEP for southeast England.

Lucas co-sponsored the declaration, along with four other members, calling for a ban on the import or sale in Europe of any products from hooded or harp seals.

A “written declaration” rarely receives the support of enough MEPs to become the parliament’s official policy, but with 373 signatures, the call for a seal fur import ban did just that, two weeks ahead of its parliamentary deadline.

Belgium, Italy and the Netherlands have, or are currently implementing, national bans on seal products. Canadian officials, including DFO Minister Loyola Hearn, have defended the hunt in meetings with their European counterparts.

Their message is that sealing is essential to the survival of aboriginal peoples in the Arctic.

Lucas has said the proposed ban should exempt the traditional Inuit hunt and focus only on commercial hunters, but, if adopted, the ban could cripple the Inuit seal hunt.

“Banning the import of all seal fur is the only guaranteed way of saving thousands of animals’ lives and showing the EU takes animal welfare and protection issues seriously,” Lucas said.


September 8, 2006

New name for anti-suicide day

September 10 will now be called “Embrace Life Day” in Nunavut.

Elsewhere in the world, the day is known as “Suicide Awareness Day.”

But Inuit organizations and the Government of Nunavut are following the lead of the National Inuit Youth Council, which rebranded the day as Embrace Life Day, to emphasize the positive values of living well, rather than the tragedy of lives lost to suicide.

Nunavut’s Isaksimagit Inuusirmi Katujjiqatigiit Embrace Life Council is organizing community marches on Sept. 10, where participants are asked to waves flags designed for the event.

Wristbands will also be given to children, along with a brochure, entitled “Embracing Life: This is who I am.”

Suicide rates among Canadian Inuit are 11 times the national average.

Mary Simon, president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, said a better understanding of mental illness in Inuit communities could help curb these deaths.

“Our communities need to recognize mental illness and see it for what it really is. It can be treated; people just need to know where to go for help and how to help if asked,” Simon said in a press release.

As well, mental-wellness programs need better, more sustained funding, and organizations involved in combating mental illness need to share information better, Simon said.

Health minister Leona Aglukkaq chimed in.

“We need to remember that life is full of limitless possibilities if we embrace life each and every day,” Aglukkaq said in a press release.


September 8, 2006

Nunasi Corp. wants art for YK building

Nunavut’s territorial-wide Inuit birthright corporation, the Nunasi Corp., is looking for an Inuit artist to help decorate its head office building in Yellowknife. The project is intended to celebrate Nunasi’s 30th anniversary.

The company, which has been headquartered in Yellowknife since the late 1980s, is looking for art work to decorate its main stairwell, between the second and third floor landings.

Proposals from artists should include: a biography of the artist; pictures and descriptions of previous art work; a description of the artists’ overall concept and methodology; a time line for completion and contact information. Fees and expenses for each project must also be provided. Interested artists should contact the Nunasi Corp. at: Cathy Munro, 867-920- 4587 or cathy@nunasi.com.

Their mailing address is:
Nunasi Corporation
Suite 301, 5109 48thStreet
Yellowknife, NWT
X1A 1N5
Attn: Cathy Munro, CA


September 8, 2006

Young, talented and craving a trip to China?

Karen Dunphy has a great opportunity for two Nunavut teens who possess some knowledge of Inuit culture and are skilled at throat singing, drum dancing and games.

Dunphy, a participant in Canada World Youth, hopes to locate two teens with these attributes and take them to China with her in November to demonstrate their skills.

Dunphy went to China with Canada World Youth in 2004-05 and taught English to government workers. While she was there she had the opportunity to give a presentation about the land, culture and the economic growth of Nunavut to the president of China and former Prime Minister Paul Martin.

In August, Dunphy was invited to return to China by Siciep, a Chinese youth organization similar to Canada World Youth, and come to Beijing to talk about Nunavut.

She has been asked to bring two youth with her to help her demonstrate Inuit games, throat singing, drum dancing and other aspects of Inuit culture. The event will also include representatives from Sweden, Russia and China.

“It’s great for anyone who wants to learn a new culture, meet new people and see something different from Iqaluit,” said Dunphy. “And the food is great.”

Dunphy is seeking two youth between the ages of 13 and 17 who have a passport and no criminal record to accompany her from Nov. 9 to Nov. 27. For more information contact Karen Dunphy in Iqaluit at 979-0669.


August 25, 2006

From Nunavut DM to head of United Church

Nora Sanders, formerly Nunavut’s deputy minister of justice, is now the general secretary of the United Church of Canada.

Sanders was well-liked and widely-respected during her stint with the Government of Nunavut. She started with the GN as deputy minister of justice in 1998 until a sudden departure in May of 2004.

At the time, it was perceived that she took the fall for Kevin O’Brien, the former MLA for Arviat and speaker of the house, who was found to have been charged with illegal possession of liquor in Arviat, a dry community.

This undisclosed charge, and subsequent guilty plea, caused much outrage among MLAs, because it was not publicized until after the February, 2004 territorial election, even though O’Brien was defeated in that election anyway.

Shortly after her departure, Sanders found a job as a deputy minister with the Saskatchewan provincial government.

Her new job makes her the senior staff and administrative officer for the United Church’s general council, executive and sub-executive.


August 25, 2006

Okalik names new principal secretary

Premier Paul Okalik named Patricia Angnakak of Iqaluit as his new principal secretary this past Monday.

Angnakak served as CEO of the Kakivak Association from 1992 to 1999, and more recently, as NTI’s director of social and cultural development. She was also Nunavut’s first deputy commissioner.

A political secretary serves as chief of staff and political advisor to the premier. She will be one of several staff who work closely with Okalik on a regular basis.

Angnakak fills the void left by Peter Ma, who was shuffled from his former post as principal secretary on July 1 to a new job as deputy minister of finance.

That move was part of larger shake-up that the government says is supposed to help Inuit senior managers gain experience and skills.


August 11, 2006

Marijuana Party leader pleads guilty

Nunavut’s leader of the Marijuana Party pleaded guilty to longstanding drug-related charges in an Iqaluit court this Tuesday.

Ed deVries pleaded guilty to trafficking marijuana and laundering the proceeds of crime, two charges he’s faced since August 2004.

The charges stem from an RCMP investigation that began in December 2003, when police intercepted a filing cabinet containing $100,000 worth of marijuana in Montreal during a Canada Post inspection. The cabinet was bound for a company owned by deVries in Iqaluit.

Earlier this year, deVries’ accomplice, Andrew Macdonald, pleaded guilty to drug trafficking and is currently serving 90 days in prison.

Several weeks ago deVries told Nunatsiaq News he planned to stand trial in Igloolik by jury. He said he believed he would be acquitted, given the number of pot smokers he says live in the community.

Since then he’s been accused of tarnishing the community’s reputation by angry residents and Igloolik’s mayor, Paul Quassa. Quassa has said some elders want deVries banished.

DeVries is to appear for sentencing in Igloolik on Sept. 25.


August 4, 2006

Parks officer dies in climbing accident

A Parks Canada patrol officer fell to his death while rappelling down the face of Mount Thor in Auyuittuq National Park last Tuesday.

Philip Robinson, 26, had worked for Parks Canada since 2001, first in Quttinirpaaq National Park on Ellesmere Island and later in Auyuittuq National Park, located between Pangnirtung and Qikiqtarjuaq. Robinson was originally from Igloolik.

“He was amazing. He connected to everybody. He was one of those larger than life people,” said Pauline Scott, a communications officer for Parks Canada in Iqaluit.

Police and Parks Canada are investigating the death, which is believed to be caused either by equipment failure or human error. Robinson was considered an experienced climber, Slawson said.

 

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