Ice Age Now by Robert 12/23/2019
“Once, the bears were our food. Now we’ve become the food.â€
– Naujaat elder Donat Milortok
The fate and ferocity of the North’s greatest predator has pitted the Inuit against southern scientists, leading to an extraordinary moment in a Nunavut court
It is the Inuit who are most vulnerable. “The local Inuit have been saying for years and years that the polar bear population is too big,†says Paul Irngaut, director of wildlife and environment for Nunavut Tunngavik Inc., an organization that speaks for the territory’s Inuit. “We can’t deal with them, especially the ones close to communities that put human life in danger.â€
Chesterï¬eld Inlet, a Nunavut community on western Hudson Bay, has hired two people to carry rifles and watch over kids’ outdoor camps during the summer. “It’s getting worse every year,†says Mayor Simionie Sammurtok. “People don’t go for a walk anymore because there are too many polar bears. You have to carry a rifle all the time.â€
“Some scientists identify that they believe polar bears are declining because of the impacts of climate change,†says Drikus Gissing, director of wildlife management for Nunavut’s Department of Environment. “Fortunately for polar bears, and unfortunately for some scientists, we have not observed those steep declines.â€
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Excerpts from a fascinating article by Aaron HutchinsPublished: April 15, 2019
It was about one hour before sunset on Sept. 8 when one local looked out toward the waters of Repulse Bay, at the northwestern edge of Hudson Bay. Almost immediately, anyone within earshot of a CB radio—most hunters keep theirs on all the time—heard the one word spoken aloud far too often as of late: Nanuk. Polar bear.
The animal was just a couple of hundred metres from town when another voice came over the airwaves, that of respected elder and once-active hunter Charlie Tinashlu: “Kill that polar bear before it gets too close,†he broadcast. “Kill it before it kills one of us—again.â€
More:
https://www.iceagenow.info/to-kill-a-polar-bear/