Nunavut / Inuit Territorium
Makita says ‘Let the beneficiaries of the Nunavut Land Claim decide about uranium mining, through a free and democratic vote!’ (2011, en)
IQALUIT — March 17, 2011 Nunavummiut Makitagunarningit (Makita) today called on NunavutTunngavik Inc. (NTI) to hold a vote of beneficiaries of the NunavutLand Claims Agreement on whether or not their land claim corporationshould support uranium mining in Nunavut. “We hope and expect that NTI’s forthcoming review of its UraniumPolicy will be an open and transparent…
Read MoreMakita Press Release 11/03/17 (2011, en)
Nunavummiut Makitagunarningit: 11/03/17 new stuff from Makita Makita is will be distributing two new handouts at the GN publicforums when began yesterday. These are in addition to the materials wehave been distributing for some time now. — ‘Kiggavik history handout’ presents some very interestingcorrespondence etc. from 1988 to 2008. You’re sure to learn somethingabout the…
Read MoreMore than 120 people turn out in Iqaluit to talk about uranium (CBC News, 2011, en)
CBC NewsMarch 18, 2011 “I Susan Enuaraq, Palluq Enuaraq, who will vote in Iqaluit East, donot want uranium mining.” More than 120 people turned out last night in Iqaluit to talk abouturanium. It was the first of three public forums organized by theNunavut government as it tries to develop its policy on uraniummining. Eight panelists…
Read MoreSandra Inutiq’s speech at the GN public forum (2011, en)
March 20, 2011 I would like to talk about an important void in these discussions onmining, which is sustainability. Sustainability includes having aclear vision for Nunavut as a healthy ecosystem, a healthy and vibrantsociety that is strong in its cultural roots. The very basis of Inuitculture is sustainability which includes respect for all that isaround…
Read MoreIn defense of emotionalism, Makita responds (Nunatsiaq News, 2011, en)
letter to the editor Nunatsiaq News March 31, 2011 The editorial “On uranium, don’t look for simple answers” (March 28) asks “What, exactly, does … ‘political oppression’ consist of?” Oppression consists of residents of Baker Lake who voted to oppose the proposed Kiggavik uranium mine in a municipal plebiscite in 1990 — the only free…
Read MoreA vast canadian Wilderness poised for a Uranium Boom (Yale Environment, 2012, en)
30 JAN 2012: REPORT Canada’s Nunavut Territory is the largest undisturbed wilderness in the Northern Hemisphere. It also contains large deposits of uranium, generating intense interest from mining companies and raising concerns that a mining boom could harm the caribou at the center of Inuit life. by ed struzik Until her semi-nomadic…
Read MoreFrench Company pushes for uranium mine in the Canadian Arctic wilderness (2012, en)
by Rachel Cernansky Energy / Energy Police January 30, 2012 If you travel to Nunavut, a territory in Canada that stretches from the mainland to nearly the North Pole, you can encounter—because it’s so remote and has so few roads—caribou herds migrating freely that are among the biggest in the world. Between 65,000 and 400,000 animals or more live…
Read MoreThe uranium controversy in Baker Lake (Indigenous Politics, 2012, en)
INDIGENOUS POLITICSWARREN BERNAUER | February 3rd 2012 Baker Lake is a small and mostly Inuit community. The only inland community in Nunavut, it is located west of Hudson Bay, near the geographic centre of Canada. Its Inuktitut name is Qamani’tuaq (“where the river widens”). Baker Lake is in what is referred to today as the…
Read MoreMakitas Comments on the draft guidelines for AREVA Resources Canada Inc’s preparation of the EIS for the proposed ‘Kiggavik’ Project
Submission to the Nunavut Impact Review Board January 24, 2011
Read MoreOn the front lines of the new uranium rush with the Inuit of Nunavut (Nuclear Caribou)
by Mark Dowie Published in the January / February 2009 issue of Orion magazine A CARIBOU CALVING GROUND – Nunavut, Canada: June days lengthen and snow melts to reveal tiny bright wildflowers and nutritious lichens. Thousands of pregnant caribou gather in tight circles. They are gaunt and exhausted from their six-hundred-mile migration from the boreal…
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