Nunavut joins battle to support seal hunt
Nunavut has joined forces withNewfoundland and Labrador to fight those opposed to the seal hunt in Canada, following a meeting between government leaders in Iqaluit on Monday.
Up until now, Nunavut has tried to maintain a distance between the Inuit traditionalharvest of seals for food and the controversial commercial seal hunt on the East Coast.
Nunavut Premier Paul Okaliksays a proposed European seal ban affectsthe Inuit, who rely on the hunt to sustain and provide food for their families.
"We'll continue to be one of the defenders of the seal hunt because it's in our interest to see and spread the market," Okaliksaid.
European Parliament lawmakers issued a declaration in September 2006 demanding the European Union ban seal products in Europe to protest Canada's seal hunt.
Early in February of this year, the British began pushing for aEuropean Union ban on seal products, despite the EU's executive commission rejection of a ban in late January.
Won't ignore activists
Newfoundland Fisheries Minister Tom Rideout says the province is taking a new tack on the seal issue, choosing to challenge animal rights activists instead of ignoring them.
His province has both a traditional Inuit hunt in Nunatsiavut and the commercial hunt, which puts $70 millioninto the pockets of people who are normally unemployed every winter.
"We're not going to be content to sit back and have lies, in particular, misinformed opinion, go unchallenged so we're going to be proactive from here on in, defending the seal huntof a sustainable resource humanely harvested," Rideout said.