|
December 13, 2002
Alikatuktuk returns to
QIAs top job
Only 33 per cent of
eligible voters cast ballots
Thomasie Alikatuktuk
credits his presidential win to the work hes done in the last year rebuilding
the once-troubled organization.
(PHOTO BY KIRSTEN
MURPHY)
|
DENISE
RIDEOUT
Thomasie Alikatuktuk and
Malachi Arreak, familiar faces to Baffin residents, took the two top spots in
this weeks Qikiqtani Inuit Association election.
On Dec. 9, Inuit beneficiaries
in the Baffin region elected Alikatuktuk as QIAs president and Arreak
as vice-president.
Alikatuktuk will serve
three years, while Arreak will serve two years.
There wasnt much
campaign hype in the weeks leading up to the election. But on voting day, snowstorms
whipped through Iqaluit, Cape Dorset and Kimmirut, making it difficult for voters
to get to the polls. In those communities, less than 20 per cent of voters cast
ballots.
But voter turnout was dismal
in almost every community. Of the 7,625 beneficiaries eligible to vote for president,
only 2,553, or 33 per cent, cast ballots.
QIAs presidential
winner, Thomasie Alikatuktuk, had been serving as the associations interim
president since September 2001. He grabbed 943 votes, beating out three other
candidates.
Archie Angnakak of Iqaluit
trailed behind with 756 votes. Elijah Erkloo, a Pond Inlet resident, got 422
votes, while Sam Omik, also of Pond Inlet, came in with 417 votes.
Alikatuktuk, a renowned
artist from Pangnirtung, is the third president the Qikiqtani Inuit Association
has seen in the last two years, a period marked by turmoil.
In the fall of 2000, QIAs
board of directors removed president Pauloosie Keyootak from office for violating
QIAs code of conduct. A year later, the board ousted Meeka Kilabuk, who
had been elected to replace Keyootak as president.
QIAs board then appointed
Alikatuktuk to sit as interim president.
During that 15-month term,
Alikatuktuk helped rebuild an organization that had nearly collapsed.
"When I was first
appointed president, there was so much to do. I didnt know where to start,"
the 49-year-old said in an interview from his QIA office.
"Our organization
hardly had any employees, only about six or seven."
His first task was to staff
QIA. He hired a new executive director and a financial officer, who in turn
recruited more employees.
Now, the organization is
fully staffed and in a strong financial state. In 2001-02, QIA produced
a $768,000 surplus.
"I think thats
what people noticed, that things have improved," Alikatuktuk said. "Thats
why they wanted me to continue that work. I was encouraged by the people of
Baffin Island to continue my work."
His strongest show of support
came from his home town of Pangnirtung, where he got 172 votes. Beneficiaries
in Sanikiluaq, Igloolik and Iqaluit also threw their support behind him.
With this weeks win,
Alikatuktuk will sit as the associations president for the next three
years.
He plans to visit all nine
Baffin communities to gauge how beneficiaries would like to see QIA improve,
and he wants to tackle health and social problems in the region.
"One of the things
I will do is look at the high cost of living. We never looked at that before,
so I want to do that," Alikatuktuk said.
"Inuit have almost
lost their traditional way," he added. "I want to try to get it back."
Arreak wins as vice-president
Three candidates vied for
vice-president.
Malachi Arreak toppled
QIAs acting vice-president, George Eckalook, to take that position.
Arreak, originally from
Pond Inlet and now living in Iqaluit, took 937 votes. Eckalook, a Resolute Bay
resident, got only 808 votes. The third candidate, Jaypeetee Qarpik of Pangnirtung,
came in with 811 votes.
This is Arreaks second
job with Baffins Inuit organization. He worked at QIAs predecessor,
the Baffin Regional Inuit Association, as the chief lands and resources officer.
Arreak, 38, is an old hand
at politics. He was the deputy chief negotiator with the Tungavik Federation
of Nunavut on the Nunavut land claims agreement. He also played a major role
in negotiating the Inuit impact and benefits agreement connected to the creation
of Nunavuts three national parks.
After watching how Baffin
has lacked real leadership in recent years, Arreak decided to throw his hat
into the race.
"Ive waited
for leadership in the region for quite a while and nothing seems to have happened.
So my goal is to get things rolling again," he said in an interview.
"Id like to
make sure that by the time I leave theres definite long-term vision and
plan for Inuit-owned lands," Arreak added.
Inuit in the Baffin region
also elected directors for nine communities. Cape Dorsets new director
is Ashevak Ezekiel; James Qillaq was elected in Clyde River; Hall Beachs
director is Timut Qamukaq; Igloolik voted for George Qulaut; Joshua Kango is
the new director for Iqaluit; Tommy Evic will represent Pangnirtung, and Pond
Inlet elected Jesse Nutarak.
Mikidjuk Kolola was acclaimed
in Kimmirut, and Ross Pudluk was acclaimed in Resolute Bay.
The community board members
will each serve for three years.
|