WARNING: This story contains distressing details.Louisa Cookie-Brown was a young girl when she saw police officers shoot her ...
"They had no more means of going out on the land, to go hunt, to fish..." Ottawa apologized for its role in the slaughter of ...
Ottawa will offer financial compensation to Inuit in Nunavik for the devastation caused by the mass slaughter of their sled ...
A Nunavik school board will partner with Vanier College for a fly-in program verifying the experience of behaviour and ...
Getting the Canadian government to apologize for its role in the mass killing of Nunavik sled dogs has been a 25-year-long mission for Pita Aatami, the president of Makivvik Corporation ...
Two unidentified Inuit men on dog sled. During the 1950s and 1960s, sled dogs in Nunavik that weren't tied up were killed for ...
By Samuel Wat  Canadian government giving $45 million in compensation to Inuit in Nunavik Getting the Canadian government to ...
The federal government is contributing $45 million in compensation to Inuit in Nunavik, as part of Canada's apology for its role in the killing of sled dogs between the mid-1950s until the late 1960s.
Getting the Canadian government to apologize for its role in the mass killing of Nunavik sled dogs has been a 25-year-long mission for Pita Aatami, the president of Makivvik Corporation, which ...