January 3, 2003
On the doorstep of a new
future
2002 in Nunavik
A Valentines
Day fire destroys Puvirnituqs municipal garage, along with 11 essential
vehicles.
(FILE PHOTO)
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Nunatsiaq News
Nunavik residents may remember
2002 as the year when a series of major political agreements and negotiations-in-progress
opened the door to a new future for the region.
The Makivik Corporations
warm relationship with Quebecs Parti Québecois government bore
fruit in 2002, with the signing of the Sanarrutik Agreement on economic development,
under which Quebec will give Nunavik more than $360 million over the next 25
years.
Makivik also took a major
step toward resolving its longstanding aboriginal claim to the waters surrounding
Nunavik when they and federal negotiators initialed an agreement-in-principle.
At the same time, Makivik
negotiators quietly sat down with provincial and federal officials to work out
a deal on a new form of regional government for Nunavik, based on the Nunavik
Commissions Let Us Share document.
Negotiators are predicting
a new government deal soon, in spite of objections from Kativik School Board
officials, who say the process has been undemocratic.
January
Kuujjuaqs
Ikkaqivvik bar rings in the New Year with a new action plan to combat crime
and public drunkenness. The bar now insists that patrons be sober when they
walk in and, if patrons utter threats or misbehave, they may be barred from
the premises.
Shaomik Inukpuk
resurfaces as the mayor of Inukjuak, just in time to greet a group of visiting
officials from Québec City. Inukpuk had been serving a month-long suspension
since December. Inukjuak municipal council suspended Inukpuk after he reportedly
spent a business trip in Montreal boozing.
Quebecs minister
responsible for the elimination of poverty promises Inukjuak residents that
any new provincial anti-poverty strategy would include a provision for Nunavik.
Nicole Léger makes the announcement after a brief visit to Inukjuak,
where she talked with representatives from a womans group, the youth association
and a food bank. Inukjuak has the highest percentage of welfare and unemployment
insurance recipients in Nunavik close to half of the adult population.
February
Quebec Premier Bernard
Landry initiates a spring cabinet shuffle to put a fresh young face on the assembly.
The move leaves Nunavik without several longstanding supporters. Rémy
Trudel replaces Guy Chevrette, 62, as minister of native affairs. Chevrette
had served in the position since the mid-1990s. David Cliché, 49, who
served as native affairs minister before Chevrette and once lived in Nunavik,
quits when it becomes apparent he would lose his industry, science and technology
cabinet post. Jacques Brassard, 61, quit because he would have lost his natural-resrouces
portfolio. Michel Létourneau, the MLA for Ungava, becomes the new minister
for Northern Development. Diane Gaudette replaces Robert Sauvé as head
of the Sécrétariat des Affaires Autochtones.
An early morning
Valentines Day fire rages through Puvirnituqs municipal garage,
destroying 11 of the communitys essential vehicles. The blaze ruins three
sewage trucks, two dump trucks, two support vehicles, a grader, bulldozer and
school bus, and the communitys only garbage truck.
Judge Daniel Bédard
makes the Ungava coasts first dangerous offender finding in the trial
of Lucassie Kokkinerk, 33,of Quaqtaq. Bédard declares the man a long-term
offender and sentences him to 26 months in jail for sexual assault on a minor.
Kokkinerk had been before the court six times after turning 18.
Kuujjuaqs
Junior May wins the 2002 Ivakkak Cup, beating Charlie Watt Jr., also of Kuujjuaq,
by only two minutes. May completes the annual dog team race in 30 hours, 32
minutes.
March
The years
long conflict between the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and Nunavik hunters
begins when a DFO biologist says that Nunavimmiut hunters exceeded the federal
governments 2001 beluga quotas. Mike Hammill warns that the eastern Hudson
beluga population will die out within 15 years if hunters kill belugas at their
current rate.
The Kativik School
Board announces that its move from Montreal to Nunavik may take up to seven
years. The school board makes the announcement after Quebecs education
department suggests the KSB move its offices "piece by piece" to stay
within the departments limited budget. The school board had first asked
for $45 million, but the Quebec education department says it will only spend
part of its $17-million annual capital budget on the move.
The Kativik Regional
Government threatens to pull out of policing in Nunavik if the federal and provincial
governments dont agree to pay for 11 new stations in the region. Most
police stations in Nunavik are trailers bought second-hand from the provincial
police force in 1995.
The Kativik Regional
Police Force announces assaults in the region are increasing. Chief Brian Jones
says there were 525 assaults in 2000 and 723 in 2001. During the first month
of 2002, there were 56 assaults alone. Jones warns there will be nearly 700
assaults in Nunavik by years end if the monthly rate continues. He attributes
the increase to drug and alcohol abuse.
Makivik Corporation
elects a new board and executive members. Markusie Qisiiq of Kangiqsujjuaq,
Martha Kauki of Kangirsuk and Silas Berthe of Tasiujaq are re-elected to Makiviks
board. Adamie Makiuk of Ivujivik, Keny Assevak from Killiniq and Robbie Tookalak
from Umiujaq win board seats by acclamation. Johnny Peters returns as vice-president
of renewable resources.
April
The provincial government
and Makivik Corporation sign the Sanarrutik Agreement on April 9 in Tasiujaq.
The economic development deal will see Quebec pay more than $360-million in
tax-free, indexed transfers to Nunavik over the next 25 years.
Makivik president
Pita Atami reacts with astonishment after learning that Nunavut is upset over
Nunaviks offshore claim agreement with the federal government. The two
parties initialed the agreement on March 26. Nunavut Premier Paul Okalik says
hes upset the offshore agreement-in-principle gives commercial fishing
rights in Nunavut waters to Nunavik Inuit. Aatami responds by saying he does
not believe the small quota guarantee is worth haggling over.
Roda Grey, 52, walks
more than 240 kilometres from Kuujjuarapik to Chisasibi to promote diabetes
awareness. She spends six days walking through rain, wind and cold, staying
in tents and fishing cabins along her route. Grey, a former nurse who has worked
on Inuit health issues for more than a decade, says she wants Inuit to learn
about the importance of a healthy diet and exercise.
Quebecs new
provincial electoral map leaves Nunavik within the Ungava riding. This means
theres no possibility that Nunavik will ever have a seat in Quebecs
national assembly for at least 10 years . That could change if a special law
is passed to change the ridings boundaries.
Beluga quotas are
centre stage at Makivik Corporations annual general meeting in Tasuijaq.
Paulusi Novalinga, the president of Nunaviks Anguvigak Hunters, Fishers
and Trappers Association, tells delegates hes frustrated the Nunavik beluga
management plan was approved but not respected by hunters.
May
Makivik Corporation
bans non-Inuttitut speaking Inuit from running in the organizations board
and executive elections. The birthright organization made the decision at its
annual general meeting in Tasiujaq. The change upsets some Nunavimmiut who say
the bylaw prevents qualified and passionate Inuit from running.
NAV Canada unveils
a new radar station near Kuujjuaq that will allow Montreal air traffic controllers
to monitor aircraft flying within 250 kilometres of the community.
A fire destroys
Puvirnituqs co-op. Two buildings worth at least $2.5 million are destroyed
in the fire. Volunteers open a temporary store within 24 hours.
Law enforcement
officials arrest two men in Kuujjuaq for illegally harvesting a cache of falcon
eggs. The eggs are worth thousands of dollars on the black market. Jeffrey Paul
Lundrun of South Africa and Paul Charles Mullin of Great Britain are charged
with six counts of illegal possession of eggs and hunting without a licenses
and fined a total of $7,250, the maximum permitted by Quebecs wildlife
legislation.
June
Bernard Landry gives
a $7- million cheque to Makivik Corporation President Pita Aatami and KRG chairman
Johnny Adams, at a posh dinner in Quebec City celebrating the signing of the
Sanarrutik Agreement. The cheque is first of many payments the province will
make under the deal over the next 25 years.
In mid-June, the
DFO cuts 2002 beluga quotas to 15 whales per community. The federal government
also bans beluga hunting in the Ungava Bay and Eastern Hudson Bay areas. The
next week the DFO offers $50,000 to angry Nunavik hunters to subsidize additional
travel costs incurred by the new harvesting rules.
July
Makivik Corporation
and the Qikiqtani Inuit Association team up to investigate the Inuit dog slaughters
of the 1950s and 1960s. The presidents of both organizations sign a joint letter
to the Minister of Indian and northern affairs requesting a public hearing into
the debate. The federal government maintains there are no records of the slaughter,
but Liberal MP Guy St-Julien promises to send a petition on the dog slaughter
to Ottawa.
General Marc Caron,
commander of the Canadian Forces in Quebec, arrives in Inukjuak to award Abraham
Irqu, 72, with a medal for 53 years of service as a Canadian Ranger. The late
Jimmy Johannes of Kuujjuaq was also honoured posthumously for his 42 years of
services as a Ranger.
Salluit hosts the
Eastern Arctic Music Festival. The event draws participants from Coral Harbour,
Cape Dorset, Iqaluit and Pangnirtung in Nunavut and Nunavik communities such
as Kuujjuaq, Kangiqsujuaq, Kangirsuk, Puvirnituq, Kuujjuarapik, Inukjuak and
Salluit.
August
Elijah Snowball,
18, is charged with first-degree murder in the Aug. 2 slaying of Aloupa Watt,
27. Alcohol was apparently involved in the Kuujjuaq incident. Snowball was only
recently released from jail after being charged with assault causing bodily
harm with a weapon.
Kuujjuaq hosts the
ninth general assembly of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference in its newly constructed
convention centre. The week-long summit draws delegates from across Canada,
Alaska, Greenland and Russia. Work crews scramble to open Kuujjuaqs centre
in time for the ICC opening ceremony. Delegates end the summit by pressing the
United Nations to ratify a draft declaration on indigenous rights and acclaiming
Sheila Watt-Cloutier as their new president of the ICC.
September
Johnny Adams wins
a third term as chairman of the Kativik Regional Government. Regional councillors
acclaim Adams to another two-year term but he only agrees to serve another year
in the position.
Makivik Corporation
contemplates using a $50,000 payout from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans
to buy beluga muktuk from Nunavut for Nunavimmiut whose hunting practices are
drastically altered by DFOs 2002 harvest rules.
Guy St-Julien, the
Liberal MP for Abitibi-Baie James-Nunavik, promises to oppose proposed changes
to the territorys federal electoral boundaries.
October
After a massive
two-week ground and aerial search, the body of a missing Inukjuak man is found
by two young hunters. The pair discover the body of Joeadamie Inukpuk, a hunter
who went missing the afternoon of Sept. 23, less than a kilometer outside of
town. Inukpuk had died of exposure.
Kuujjuaqs
mayor threatens to take the company that built its new cultural centre to court
over faulty and incomplete construction. Michael Gordon lists a series of grievances
against Progère Construction, including leaks in the centres ceiling
and doors that dont close properly. The company, however, says any fault
lies with the municipal council.
Makivik Corporation
and the federal government sign the Nunavik Marine Region agreement-in-principle
in Montreal. The agreement establishes a Nunavik marine region that will be
overseen by shared management boards. But Nunavut officials continue to protest
the deal, saying Nunavik should not have a constitutional guarantee to turbot
fishing in Nunavut waters.
The Quebec government
and Nunaviks Inuit leaders unveil an inuksuk on the National Assembly
grounds. The traditional Inuit marker is meant to symbolize the growing understanding
between the provincial government and Nunavimmiut.
The Kativik Regional
Government decides Inukjuak should be the site of the territorys new jail.
The centre will house 40 people who are either in remand or serving jail terms
of less than two years. The KRG says the new jail should be ready by the end
of 2005.
November
The Nunavik health
board reports that more than 80 per cent of Nunavik adolescents smoke. The staggering
figure was taken from a region-wide report on dental hygiene. The report also
finds 30 per cent of adolescents begin smoking when they are less than 10 years
old and that 66 per cent continue their habit even though they know it causes
gum disease.
Donat Savoie, the
federal negotiator for Nunaviks self-government talks, predicts that Nunavik
will have a self-government framework agreement by the end of the year. Government
and Inuit representatives have quietly been hammering out the agreement since
the summer even as the Kativik School Board seeks to end the negotiations.
After learning self-government
framework negotiations are ongoing, the Kativik School Board forges ahead with
a revived legal action aimed at freezing self-government talks. The KSB goes
before a Quebec Superior Court judge to declare the talks illegal. But the judge
rules the talks may proceed- although he also says the negotiations could be
declared invalid at a later date.
A mere 33 per cent
of Nunavimmiut go to the polls to elect the Kativik School Board new commissioners.
Six of the seven school board commissioners seeking another term are re-elected
including Sarah Aloupa who returns for another term as the school boards
president.
December
Researchers from
the University of Montreal, the Quebec Ministry of Natural Resources and Simon
Fraser University discover the worlds oldest volcanic rocks near Inukjuak.
The rocks are more than 3.82 billion years old.
Puvirnituq opens
its new co-op superstore. The new store, which contains a post-office, late-night
convenience store, fast food restaurant and retail space for a future hair salon,
replaces the former store that was gutted by a May fire.
Department of Fisheries
and Oceans officials join Inuit representatives from Nunavik and Nunavut to
develop a recovery strategy for the areas beluga population. The beluga
recovery team meets for the first time in early December. At the meeting, Inuit
representatives warn that the impending Species at Risk Act, which is now before
the Senate, could bring an abrupt end to traditional beluga harvests in the
Ungava and eastern Hudson Bay areas.
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