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May 3, 2002
Atuqtuarvik loans not always
easy money
MARION SOUBLIERE
A 2000 loan provided by
Atuqtuarvik Corporation to Qikiqtaaluk Corporation worth $1,333,333.33 was recently
the centre of a legal dispute.
QC filed a statement of
claim Nov. 5 in the Nunavut Court of Justice against Sakku Investments Corporation
for money owed.
QC, Sakku and Makivik Corp.
are partners in Nunavut Umiaq Corporation, a 50 per cent owner in Iqaluit-based
Transport Umialarik Inc./Umialarik Transportation Inc. (the other 50 per cent
is held by Transport Nanuk Inc.).
TUI ferries cargo goods
to Nunavut and Nunavik. According to court documents, when TUI entered into
an agreement to buy a $12.5-million marine vessel the MV Umiavut
Makivik, Sakku and QC were to each pay $666,666.66. But because Sakku was in
financial straits, QC secured a loan from Atuqtuarvik for itself and for Sakku.
Sakku didnt pay QC
back, however, and after repeated requests, QC lodged a statement of claim.
In a press release dated
Dec. 12, 2001, Atuqtuarvik Corporation announced that Sakku had received a loan
to help "with its share of buying the MV Umiavut in a joint venture with
Qikiqtaaluk and Makivik Corporations."
NTI also issued $1,104,000
to the Sakku Recovery Plan, a formal financial recovery strategy, in December
2001, and has committed to $1,046,513 in 2002-3.
Atuqtuarvik Corporation,
the Inuit investment and loans firm set up by Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. in May
2000 to fill the dire need of Inuit-owned companies for access to capital, fuels
business pursuits ranging from an Inuit cultural wilderness resort in Baker
Lake to an Iqaluit-based charter airline.
Atuqtuarvik, a for-profit
business, is funded by investment profit from Nunavut Trust through a holding
company called Nunavut Economic and Social Development Trust Inc., which owns
all of the preference shares of Atuqtuarvik, said NTI director of finance Peter
Rose.
The Rankin Inlet-based
Atuqtuarvik began with $20 million with plans to reach $50 million in five years.
Another $10-million infusion last August brought Atuqtuarviks core funding
up to $30 million.
Eligible projects must
be commercially viable, Nunavut-based, and create some benefits for Inuit such
as jobs, training, or improvements to social problems such as housing.
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