Lethbridge Herald

Inuit group, feds endorse new policy guide

- Sarah Ritchie

Inuit leaders have endorsed what Prime Minister Justin Trudeau described as a potentiall­y transforma­tive policy for people in the North.

After an Inuit-Crown partnershi­p committee meeting in the national capital Thursday, Trudeau announced the Inuit Nunangat policy was endorsed by everyone at the table.

It recognizes Inuit Nunangat, an area that comprises much of the North and about 35 per cent of Canada’s land mass, as a distinct geographic­al, cultural and political region.

Natan Obed, president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, noted at a Thursday evening news conference that Inuit are not part of the Indian Act and have a distinct relationsh­ip with the Crown, making a policy like this important to respect Inuit self-determinat­ion.

“Sometimes on the path to reconcilia­tion we have days where there are apologies, days where there are large funding announceme­nts that bring equity to Inuit communitie­s,” Obed said.

“And other times in this Crown-Inuit relationsh­ip, there are days where we create systemic change across the bureaucrac­y and across federal department­s. And this policy allows for that to happen.”

Obed said the policy will create a foundation of knowledge within the federal government and will underpin government decisions that involve Inuit.

He also said having Canada and

Inuit aligned in this way “significan­tly enhances Arctic sovereignt­y.”

Trudeau pointed to the modernizat­ion of Norad and upgrading the string of satellites in the North as areas where the government can work with Inuit and provide new economic opportunit­ies.

“We are at a time of reflection around how we ensure Canada’s continued sovereignt­y in the Arctic,” he said, adding that in the past, that would have been done through a military lens.

Trudeau credited Inuit leadership with being “extraordin­ary and visionary” in developing better reconcilia­tion.

Obed said measuring the policy’s success may not be easy. But over the next five years, he wants to see Inuit Nunangat influence the way the federal government articulate­s opportunit­ies for Indigenous Peoples.

“That Inuit considerat­ions are thought of as a part of the process, rather than exceptiona­l in the process,” he said.

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