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March 1, 2002
Womens shelters ignore
IQ, MLAs claim
"It is something
that I do not tolerate" Iqaqrialu tells Picco during question period
PATRICIA
DSOUZA
Abusive husbands should
have greater access to their wives in shelters, Tunnuniq MLA Jobie Nutarak told
members of the legislative assembly last week.
Nutarak made the comment
in a Feb. 20 members statement, launching waves of opposition and support
from fellow MLAs, and a heated debate aimed at Health Minister Ed Picco.
"Sometimes when the
women are sent out to the shelters, whether to Iqaluit or to another community,
many end up drinking and some end up having extramarital affairs," he said.
Rankin Inlet South-Whale
Cove MLA Manitok Thompson echoed Nutaraks remarks in a subsequent statement:
"One time a person,
a man, came over and talked to me about his wife leaving him to go to a shelter.
He wanted assistance and I called the shelter on his behalf to see if there
could be counselling arranged for both of them. I was told by the shelter employee
that they dealt only with women and did not involve themselves with the men
at all," she said.
"In the past, according
to Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit, when couples were having problems, elders were made
available and they were able to talk to the couples. This is what Mr. Nutarak
was getting at, and it is a heavy subject."
However, Quttiktuq MLA
Rebekah Uqi Williams described as "narrow thinking" suggestions by
her colleagues that the needs of domestic abuse victims cannot be addressed
in the territorys shelters.
"As long as there
is violence in the home, we must support shelters that provide safety,"
she said in an emotional members statement on Feb. 25.
Williams, who has worked
both as a nurse and social worker in Nunavut, has seen the effects of domestic
violence first-hand. "I have seen a mother/wife/spouse dead, lying in a
pool of blood," she said in an interview, "one with no clothes, under
the house in mid-January trying to get away from an abusive spouse."
Her colleagues, she says,
dont know the whole story. "They have never worked in that kind of
situation before. Theyre looking at the situation as minimal they
dont think its a dangerous thing."
Finding a safe place
Nutarak charged ahead with
a line of questioning aimed at Picco. "I asked about safe shelters for
woman and I didnt really get the answer I needed regarding the people
that go to these shelters," he said.
"They cannot speak
to their husbands when they go to the shelter. Perhaps the police dont
want them to or perhaps the shelter staff dont want them to. It seems
like they are put in a position where they are not allowed to have contact with
the spouse."
Picco responded by saying
that issues of law or safety sometimes make it impossible for partners to communicate
after one of them has sought shelter:
"In some cases, the
RCMP may have in place a court order, as the member has indicated, barring a
spouse from contacting another spouse because of physical or other types of
abuse that had occurred. In some cases, I know where women have chosen themselves
not to communicate with their husband or their spouse. Or they may have been
advised by their counsellor not to speak to the husband or the other spouse."
Unhappy with the health
ministers answer, Nutarak tried once more, "I was looking at it as
a left hand and a right hand. Are you going to be taking a holistic approach
or just dealing with one side of it?" he said.
"The reason why Im
asking this question is because I want to see your department take a holistic
approach in stopping or preventing family violence. I want to see both the man
and the woman counselled."
Uqqummiut MLA David Iqaqrialu
supported Nutarak in his attack on the department of health. "The government
members are making responses without any regard to Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit.
It is something that I do not tolerate," he said.
"Mr. Nutarak used
an example of using both the right and the left hand, which is Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit.
I hope that is clear, I hope you take your holistic approach."
Picco was defensive. "I
know at the family resource centre, they told us of some of the work that they
have been doing proactively incorporating Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit on where their
concerns are," he said. "But there are other regulations and rules
the members have to follow."
Iqaqrialu continued his
attack. "Is your department making plans to integrate Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit
into these regulations and statutory requirements?" he asked.
"We are doing that,"
Picco replied. "Were in the process of bringing together a comprehensive
mental health strategy that includes issues around family violence."
Still unhappy with the
response, Iqaqrialu ended his questioning with a statement of disbelief. "I
dont believe you. Are you putting anything forward soon?"
"You want to be accountable
to the man and the woman," Picco said, "And thats part of the
strategy that were bringing forward."
Admitting there is a
problem
Madeleine Qumuatuq, the
president of the Nunavut Status of Women Council, came to the health ministers
defence in a release issued on Feb. 25.
It said she "supports
Health and Social Services Minister Ed Piccos intention to enhance opportunities
for counselling at the community level."
Williams also supports
community-based initiatives in which elders counsel both men and women. "Community
caregivers are very, very useful if people are willing to get counselling. The
drastic, disruptive move to relocate somewhere is a last resort."
She understands her colleagues
concerns, and is glad they began the debate in the assembly, because the situation
cannot be resolved unless it is first addressed.
"The thinking is women
shouldnt leave their husbands. But the situation now and 60 years ago
are two totally different things," she says.
"To me, the shelters
are needed until people are willing to take counselling admit, confront
themselves and say I have a problem."
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