Tears were shed, hugs were exchanged and words of solidarity were shared at a protest in Montreal on Saturday calling for ...
More than 1,000 of the dogs that Inuit relied on for their livelihoods were shot to death by Mounties, employees of the ...
Nunavik police chief has launched a 'disciplinary investigation' into how a Christmas tree was decorated in the Umiujaq ...
Inuit spoke about how much they depended on their sled dogs, and how much they lost when over 1,000 dogs were slaughtered by ...
People took to the streets of Montreal to protest the shooting of the Papigatuk twins in Salluit, Nunavik on Nov. 4.
Tears were shed, hugs were exchanged and words of solidarity were shared at a protest in Montreal on Saturday calling for justice for two brothers who were shot last month by police in Nunavik, Que.
All of her family's 14 dogs were slaughtered by police, and they lost their ability to go out to hunt, trap and fish. Their dogs were among more than 1,000 qimmiit slaughtered by police and other ...
After police shot and killed a 21-year-old Inuk man and seriously injured his twin brother, Nunavik police are trying to ...
Nunavik's police chief has pledged to implement ... Don't let anger control you' Salluit council representative Stephen Grasser wants people to keep up the pressure on the police, but urges ...
“It decimated people’s self-confidence ... the Makivvik Corporation — the organization representing Inuit in Nunavik, launched an investigation into the slaughter when he first ...
"It decimated people's self-confidence … And the impacts of that continue to linger today." Pita Aatami is president of the Makivvik Corporation, the organization representing Inuit in Nunavik.