Waterloo Region Record

Inuit want free travel in Arctic

- Bob Weber

Inuit from Canada and Greenland hope to convince at least four government­s to let them manage and travel freely over an internatio­nal stretch of Arctic ocean that’s one of the most productive environmen­ts in the North.

“We have to educate government­s as to what’s up there,” said Okalik Eegeesiak, a member of an Inuit commission considerin­g the future of the North Water Polynya, a huge and hugely biodiverse triangle of ocean between Greenland and Ellesmere and Baffin islands.

On Thursday, the Pikialasor­suaq Commission released its report on the area of unfrozen sea considered crucial to Inuit communitie­s in Canada and Greenland.

It confirmed earlier suggestion­s that Inuit want to manage the area, establish it as protected and travel freely across it over internatio­nal borders.

They also want to return to the days before Sept. 11 when border controls were looser and Inuit were able to easily travel between Ellesmere Island and Greenland in dogsleds, on snowmobile­s or using small planes.

The North Water Polynya is an Arctic marine oasis, the largest in the world. Narwhal, beluga, walrus, bowhead whales and polar bears depend on its warmer waters and rich food resources, as do millions of sea birds.

Inuit from Greenland and Nunavut hunt in the area. Those who don’t still rely on the animals that are born there and migrate to different parts of the Arctic.

Inuit are increasing­ly concerned about the impact of shipping, oil-and-gas exploratio­n and climate change on the waters they have depended on for food for centuries.

But for the Inuit to get what they want, they have to get agreement from the government­s of Nunavut, Canada, Denmark and its territory Greenland, which has self-rule over domestic issues.

Municipal government­s would probably be involved as well, Eegeesiak said.

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