Battle brews over Nunavut's Southampton caribou harvest - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:15 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Battle brews over Nunavut's Southampton caribou harvest

Nunavuts land claims organization is vowing to fight the Nunavut governments proposed basic needs numbers for the troubled caribou population on Southampton Island: 'Inuit do not have to seek permission from the government to harvest caribou.'

'Inuit do not have to seek permission from the government to harvest caribou:' NTI VP

A wild caribou looks on near The Meadowbank Gold Mine located in the Nunavut Territory of Canada on Tuesday, March 24, 2009. (Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)

Latest

  • The Nunavut Wildlife Management Board has postponed the hearing until fall

The Nunavut government and Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. are at odds over the number of caribou to set as the basic needs level for Inuit hunting from the troubled Southampton caribou herd.

The government wants to set the number at 1,906;NTI wants 4,325.

James Eetoolook, vice-president of NTI, says the governments stance is about politicsand not the environment.

I want to put this in very stark and blunt terms: Inuit harvesters of Coral Harbour,Repulse Bay, Chesterfield Inlet and Rankin Inlet would stand to lose guaranteedaccess to more than 2,400 caribou annually. The government is trying to limit theInuit right that was negotiated and is protected by the [Nunavut land claims agreement], saidEetoolook.

"Inuit do not have to seek permission from thegovernment to harvest caribou.

The dispute comes two years after the Nunavut government set an interim quota of 1,000 animals after government studies showed a drastic decline in the Southamptonherd, from 30,000 animals in 1997 to fewer than 8,000 in 2011.

It was the first caribou quota ever imposed for Inuit in Nunavut. It was set at the request of the Aiviit Hunters and Trappers Organization in Coral Harbour.

Last summer, the interim quota was extended for another year. In December, the government proposed cutting that quota further to 800 animals.

Next month, the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board will hold public meetings before setting a total allowable harvest for the animals.

Under the land claim, that process requires government to also set a basic needs level for Inuit.

The number is supposed to consider the number of animals required by Inuit for subsistence.

If the quota for caribou is higher than that number, Inuit will get first access to the animals before any commercial harvest is considered.

Unlike the total allowable harvest numbers, there is no mechanism in place for changing the basic needs level once it is set.

Etoolook says NTI will consider legal action if the board accepts the governments recommendation.

Inuit have been around for tens of thousands of years and so have caribou and I think InuitQaujimajatuqangit[traditional knowledge and practices] should be taken very heavily by theGN," Eetoolooktold the CBC.

It means that Inuit will take less caribou to supplement their income, support their families and for food for Inuit in Nunavut. It's too low."

Survey results released last May suggested the caribou population on Baffin Island has largely disappeared, declining by 95 per cent over the last two decades.

Caribou have been wiped out on Southampton Island before in the 1950s. Animals were later moved from nearby Coats Island to re-populate Southampton.

Public hearings into the total allowable harvest and basic needs level for Southampton caribou wereset to take place at the Frobisher Inn in Iqaluit June 3 and 4.

On May 28, the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board announced it would postpone the hearings until the fall of 2014, in order to obtain more evidence, primarily from the GN and Nunavut Tunngavik.