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May 10, 2002
Inuit not getting fair
share of aboriginal money
Pauktuutit and ITK say
Ottawa ignore Inuit needs
DENISE
RIDEOUT
OTTAWA Inuit organizations
blasted the federal government last week for aboriginal programs that do a lot
to help First Nations but leave Inuit scrambling for dollars.
Representatives from Inuit
Tapiriit Kanatami, the national Inuit organization, and Pauktuutit, the Inuit
womens association, told a committee of federal government officials that
Inuit feel theyre second-class citizens in their own country.
On May 2, the two Inuit
organizations went to Parliament Hill, where they presented their case to the
House of Commons standing committee on finance, an MPs committee thats
asking groups for their opinions on the federal budget.
Both Inuit organizations
argued that while the federal government puts money into programs and services
for aboriginal people, too much of it is strictly for First Nations.
"Inuit see a move
within government to a one-size-fits-all approach to aboriginals," said
Whit Fraser, who works on policies and programs for the ITK.
Fraser said proof of that
mentality is evident in the federal governments programs for fetal alcohol
syndrome. In the 2001 budget, for example, the government allotted millions
of dollars to help children suffering from fetal alcohol syndrome. But the money
only went to children living on First Nations reserves.
"Inuit dont
live on reserves," Fraser pointed out.
He said ITK believes the
federal government is simply lumping all aboriginal people together, without
recognizing they have different social problems and require unique programs.
"There is no national
strategy for what Canada wants to do in the North," Fraser said.
"There needs to be
Inuit-specific programs. We urge the government to address the needs of all
aboriginal people, and not forget the Inuit."
Pauktuutit, which represents
Inuit women across Canada, said Inuit rarely benefit from the pots of money
set aside for aboriginal people.
"We get left out.
We have been fighting this for a long time," said Veronica Dewar, Pauktuutits
president.
While the federal government
has funded programs for First Nations victims of sexual abuse, Pauktuutit doesnt
even have enough money to determine how many Inuit women have suffered from
abuse, let alone devise programs to help them, she said.
The fact that Inuit live
in remote regions of Canada doesnt help the matter, Dewar said. The isolation
means they dont have the same access to programs available to people outside
of the North.
"Not all Inuit have
access to programs and education that are taken for granted in southern Canada,"
she said. "For us to access post-secondary education means we must leave
our communities to attend colleges and universities in southern Canada."
Even health-care services,
such as diagnostic equipment, are rare in northern hospitals. In Nunavut, she
said, there is one mammogram machine for the entire territory.
"Many women arent
diagnosed with the cancers that specifically affect women until its too
late to save their lives," she told the committee.
The two national Inuit
organizations suggested the federal government take a closer look at its commitment
to helping aboriginal people and devise programs that are geared specifically
toward Inuit.
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