November 8, 2002
Nunavuts red-serge
brigade
Eleven Inuit have completed
a 22-week RCMP training program in Regina
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Eleven of an original
15 RCMP cadets completed training in Regina and graduated earlier last month.
(PHOTO COURTESY OF JEAN-MARC NADEAU)
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MIRIAM
HILL
Nunatsiaq News
The RCMP will soon have
more Inuit faces in uniform.
On Oct. 10, 11 Inuit cadets
graduated from the cadet training program in Regina.
Cpl. Jean-Marc Nadeau,
manager for northwest region recruiting services in Iqaluit, is responsible
for recruiting across the entire territory. He explained in the fall of 2001,
the commanding officer of V-division made a commitment to recruiting Inuit members
into the RCMP.
To achieve that, the RCMPs
Inuit Recruiting and Development Program was created and Insp. Doug Reti was
brought up from Ottawa to run it.
Thirty-five possible applicants
were identified from all over Nunavut through a process of selection that involved
physical and medical testing, and 15 cadets were sent to the training academy
in April.
"They were put in
a troop that we commonly refer to as Troop 2, and underwent the cadet training
program, which is the same program that any of our applicants undergo in order
to become RCMP officers," Nadeau said. "We did that for support purposes
and so on."
In Regina they undergo
a 22-week cadet program, which includes role-playing, performance demonstrations,
lectures, panel discussions, and community interaction.
They study police defence
tactics, drill, police driving, firearms, and applied police science, which
includes learning how to build a file and learning to conduct an investigation
from the time the complaint comes in to attendance at court.
Over the six-month training
period four cadets dropped out of the program.
"On average in a troop
of 24, we lose usually one or two," Nadeau said. "Our goal was to
shoot for zero losses, but we cant control that."
At the graduation ceremony,
attended by family members, RCMP officials, Justice Minister Paul Okalik, and
his assistant deputy minister, Simon Awa, the cadets, dressed in their red-serge
uniforms, did Nunavut proud.
The graduates are: Sylvia
Sharp of Rankin Inlet; George Henrie of Rankin Inlet; Teena Palluq of Clyde
River; Kipanik Eegeesiak of Iqaluit; Russell Akeeaguk of Iqaluit; Michael Salomonie
of Cape Dorset; Jamie Savikataaq of Arviat; Nathan MacKay of Kugluktuk; James
Mearns of Pangnirtung; David Lawson of Pangnirtung; and Annie Keenainak of Pangnirtung.
"Keen? My God, thats
an understatement," Nadeau said of the graduates attitude.
In a statement made during
the legislatures last sitting in Pangnirtung, Okalik recognized the graduates
for their perseverance.
"These individuals
are a fine example as role models for our young people in Nunavut," he
said. "These individuals will complement our current Inuit officers, the
majority of whom are able to communicate in our first language and are familiar
with our own culture."
Nadeau said two of the
members, Michael Salomonie and Nathan MacKay, would be sworn in immediately
as regular RCMP members because they have completed all their requirements.
The remaining nine will
attend scholastic upgrading in their home communities because they did not pass
an entry exam originally written last January, but were very close.
Once theyre sworn
in, the members are asked to commit to three or four years in the territory,
like any other regular member.
"But we certainly
wont be holding them back once that commitment is complete," Nadeau
said, adding he encourages them to take a southern transfer for development
purposes.
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