Russian invasion of Ukraine puts 'more attention onto the needs of the Arctic'
CBC
A man whose life was upended in the name of Arctic sovereignty says Canada now needs to do more to keep his and other remote Arctic communities safe.
Larry Audlaluk is an elder and historian who lives in Canada's northernmost community, Grise Fiord, Nunavut. He was moved there forcibly in 1953 at age two from northern Quebec, when the federal government decided to plant a group of Inuit in the High Arctic as a way to exert sovereignty.
Audlaluk still lives there with his family and says watching Russia — an Arctic neighbour with ambition — invade Ukraine has been "unnerving."
"We're not too far from the North Pole," he told CBC Nunavut's Qulliq morning radio show. "Within Canada, I felt rather close to the other side."
The community of about 130 people lies just 1,500 kilometres from the North Pole, and roughly 3,400 kilometres from Ottawa.
"I felt I'm too close for comfort really."
Audlaluk is not the only northern leader keeping a close eye on the situation as Russia's invasion of Ukraine enters its second month.
N.W.T. Premier Caroline Cochrane said Russia's aggressive actions should serve as a wake-up call to shore up safety and resiliency in the North.
"Now with Russia invading Ukraine, it does show that we are vulnerable," she said. "We need to make sure that we have the structures, the infrastructure in place, the services in place so that our people can not only thrive but that we can maintain Arctic sovereignty."
Clarence Wood is the mayor of Inuvik, a town located about 200 kilometres north of the Arctic Circle in the N.W.T.
He says he's not worried for the safety of people living in Inuvik right now, but he also thinks locals would be "foolish not to be worried" about Arctic sovereignty, in light of current events.
"Russia has ambitions," he said. "They've always had ambitions in the Arctic, and with the expansion of their military to their Arctic regions, it puts us even closer. So, yeah, I'd say we have concerns. We have a very limited military presence. I don't think it would take the Russians very long to go through here if they put their mind to it."
He says there used to be a "fairly big military presence in the area" until the 1980s, when the Canadian Navy moved most of its personnel away.
Now, military planes do some exercises at the airport, but to a much lesser extent.