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April 19, 2002
Makivik: Nunavik hunters
must kill fewer beluga
President of Anguvigak
Hunters and Trappers Association says beluga quotas not respected
JANE
GEORGE
TASIUJAQ Makivik
Corporation leaders say Nunavik hunters must reduce the number of belugas they
kill every year, or risk losing their right to hunt them.
Paulusi Novalinga, the
president of Nunaviks Anguvigak Hunters and Trappers Association, told
delegates at last weeks Makivik Corporation annual general assembly that
hes frustrated that Nunaviks beluga management plan, with its higher
quotas, was approved and then not respected.
Nunaviks current
beluga management plan, reached last spring, increased the regions total
allowable beluga harvest from 290 to 360 animals. But Nunavik hunters killed
at least 395 animals.
These harvest levels could
lead to the extinction of beluga around Nunavik within 15 years, biologists
from the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans warn.
Many delegates at the Makivik
meeting in Tasiujaq agreed that Nunavik hunters had ignored the plan.
"There are some hunters
who have absolutely no intention of respecting the quotas," said Robbie
Tookalak of Umiujaq.
Makivik president Pita
Aatami urged Nunavik hunters to take the beluga quotas more seriously.
At the same time, Aatami
said its not fair to point the finger at Nunavimmiut for the depleted
beluga stocks.
"Yes, we do hunt a
lot of whales, but the numbers are nowhere in comparison to what has been done
in the past," Aatami said, referring to the slaughter of belugas by the
Hudson Bay Company during the 1800s.
Aatami also said pollutants
released by industry into the water are causing harm to Nunaviks beluga
population.
Elder George Koneak of
Kuujjuaq said hunters from his community still take belugas from the Ungava
Bays Mucalic River sanctuary, which is supposed to be totally off-limits
to beluga hunting.
"There are still people
who go there," Koneak said. "They cant pretend not to see a
beluga."
Koneak said no one in Kuujjuaq
asks them where their delicious muktuk comes from.
But Koneak said Nunavimmiut
must take action so hunters dont lose their right to hunt or end up getting
arrested.
Silas Berthe, of Tasiujaq,
agreed that Nunavik hunters should scale back the hunt because there are too
many of them, and too few whales to go around.
"I know wed
like to catch all we could, but its not possible," Berthe said. "We
can argue we used to get a lot because the Inuit population was low. But we
caught some then and probably thought we caught a lot."
DFO officials now say the
beluga quota should be cut by at least 75 per cent.
"If we want to rebuild
the stock, we must reduce the harvest to 50 animals. If we want to maintain
[the stock], then the quota can be 100, and all belugas must be taken from the
Hudson Strait," said Michel Tremblay, DFOs aboriginal fisheries advisor
in Quebec City.
Tremblay said if hunters
still want to take belugas from Eastern Hudson Bay, the quota should be 20 whales
for all of Nunavik.
Thats because genetic
tests show that one out of five belugas killed in the Hudson Strait actually
come from Eastern Hudson Bay, and, with the decreasing numbers of belugas on
that coast, the DFO doesnt want to see more than 20 of its belugas killed
in a season.
Earlier this month in Kuujjuaq,
Tremblay met with representatives from the Kativik Regional Government, Makivik
Corporation and the Nunaviks Anguvigak Hunters and Trappers Association
to present the DFOs position to them.
Pita Aatami and Makiviks
vice-president for renewable resources, Johnny Peters, said they would like
to see compensation given to hunters in the form of a subsidy if they cant
hunt belugas.
But the DFO doesnt
have any program that could cover the delivery of such subsidies, Tremblay said.
Tremblay said DFO is waiting
to hear from Nunavik officials by the end of the month on how to put a beluga
management plan back on track before this years beluga season starts.
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