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Eilís Quinn
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Thousands of containers of contaminated soil and other waste sit at an old Distant Early Warning System site at Cape Dyer, Nunavut, awaiting transport south in July, 2011. DEW line sites are some of the 142 contaminated sites that required clean up across Canada according to the most recent data. (Dave Eagles/DND/Canadian Press)
A round-up of stories that made headlines across the North this week.

Canada

Dozens of contaminated sites need to be cleaned up in Canada and among the biggest problems, abandoned mines in the country's North.

Finland

A controversial decision will allow a gold mine in west Finland to discharge its waste water.

Norway

Sweden's Accident Investigation Authority releases a report on the Norwegian plane crash in Sweden's Arctic earlier this year. 

Russia

Vladimir Putin was sworn in as president this week and there's already indications the Arctic is among his priorities.

Sweden

News that pharmacies in remote regions could be shut down has many worried in the North.

United States (Alaska)

Health was in the news in Alaska this week, with an announcement that health care in rural Alaska would be provided for veterans. Elsewhere, a wave of suicides in remote Alaskan villages has many wondering how to improve mental health services for residents in these communities.

Write to Eilís Quinn at eilis.quinn(at)cbc.ca


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Greenland glacier. AFP PHOTO: SLIM ALLAGUI
A round-up of stories that made headlines across the North this week.

Canada

Activists for women's rights claimed a major victory for aboriginal woman this week. A United Nations committee ruled against the government of Canada's Northwest Territories after the territorial housing corporation let an aboriginal woman's non-aboriginal, abusive husband have the family home in the community of Behchoko, Northwest Territories.

Finland

The Talvivaara mine in east Finland dominated headlines throughout the week. The mine produces nickel and cobalt and has plans to begin producing uranium. Some locals and environmentalists accuse the mine of polluting areas around their operations.

Greenland

A study of Greenland's glaciers suggests they may not contribute as much to projected catastrophic sea levels as previously thought. Meanwhile, Inuit hunters travel to Copenhagen to protest  a department store's decision to stop selling seal products.

Norway

Norway's long-awaited climate paper is released.

Russia

Talks advance between Russia's two biggest oil companies over drilling in the Barents Sea.

Sweden

The Finnish icebreaker Nordica has been brought to Sweden after Greenpeace activists boarded the vessel to protest Arctic drilling near Alaska.

United States (Alaska)

A study by US Geological Survey shows polar bears and their cubs swim further and longer than was previously thought, suggesting the animal may be less prone to drowning than is sometimes portrayed in the media.

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Parr (1893-1969) m. Printmaker: Lukta Qiatsuq (1928-2004) m., Cape Dorset , Men Pulling a Walrus, 1964 #60, stonecut, 41/50, 12.75 x 23 in, 32.3 x 58.4 cm sight, 21 x 31 in, 53.3 x 78.7 cm framed Est. $2,500/3,500 Image: Walkers Auctions
Walker's Auctions, one of Canada's major auction houses, is hosting an Inuit and First Nation auction tonight.

The auction catalogue says some of the works are from the personal collection of William Larmour, who once worked for Canada's then-named Department of Northern Affairs and National Resources in the 1950s.

The works going on the auction block are from all over the Canadian Arctic including well known art hubs like Cape Dorset and Baker Lake in Nunavut and communities in Nunavik, the predominantly Inuit region in northern Quebec.


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Ice Fjord of Ilulissat in Greenland. AFP PHOTO/ SLIM ALLAGUI
The 2012 International Polar Year Conference wound up today in Montreal, Canada.

Some 2,000 scientists were in town for the week-long event.

Panels and discussion forums touched on every region of the Arctic and Antarctic and covered themes ranging from science and housing to shipping and indigenous knowledge.

Here's a round up of some of our top stories from the event:

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Closing ceremony at 2012 International Polar Year conference. Photo: Eilís Quinn, Radio Canada International.
The 2012 International Polar Year Conference has drawn to a close. An extimated 2000 scientists from around the world attended the week-long meeting to discuss all things Arctic and Antarctic-related. The closing ceremony was hosted by Peter Harrison, Chair of the 2012 IPY Conference.

 Nancy Karetak-Lindell, Chair of the Indigenous Knowledge Exchange part of the conference, got some of the biggest applause of the day with her closing comments:

'The most important resoure of the Arctic is our people. We the people have to matter. ... After the researchers are all gone, we'll still be there. We want to be more important to researchers, to our countries and to the world than just the polar bear and the seal."

Related Link:

2012 International Polar Year

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Greenland doctor Henning Sloth Pederson at Pleneary Panel: Communities and Health at the 2012 International Polar Year Conference. Pedersen was present at a number of sessions during the 2012 International Polar Year Conference discussing health and wellness in Greenland. Photo: Eilís Quinn, Radio Canada International.
Earlier today I was at the Human and Environmental Well-Being session at the 2012 International Polar Year conference.

Henning Pedersen, chief medical officer at the Queen Ingrid's Hospital in Greenland's capital, Nuuk gave a talk on the amount of contaminants found in traditional foods like seal and blubber.

He says levels of certain comtaminants are so high, he's been recommending that Greenlanders avoid these foods, especially for those in their childbearing years.

His talk sparked an animated question period afterwards.


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Dr. Suzanne Stewart, a Professor of Aboriginal Healing in Counseling Psychology, University of Toronto, addressing the 2012 International Polar Year plenary panel on Communities and Health. Photo: Eilís Quinn, Radio Canada International.
Dr. Suzanne Stewart, a Professor of Aboriginal Healing in Counseling Psychology, University of Toronto, and a member of Canada'sYellowknives Dene First Nation in the Northwest Territories, addressed the Plenary Panel: Communities and Health session at the 2012 International Polar Year conference in Montreal today. 

Her discussion of the ways that the southern-based mental health care system doesn't always well serve Canada's First Nations communities seemed to resinate with a lot of people in the room who nodded their heads in agreement as she spoke.


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Lars-Anders Baer, former President of the Saami Parliament. Photo: Eilís Quinn, Radio Canada International.

Today, Lars-Anders Baer, former president of the Sami Parliament, was on the Plenary Panel: Communities and Health at the 2012 International Polar Conference in Montreal.

During is talk, Baer stressed the importance of affirming indigenous rights to things like traditional medicines and health practices. He also emphasized that respecting the rights of the Arctic's indigenous people's to their lands and waters, especially in this era of Arctic development, will play an important role in community health.


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The CCGS Amundsen is one of Canada's icebreakers that does double shifts in the summer as a science and research vessel. As part of  the 2012 International Polar Year conference, the Canadian Coast Guard brought the icebreaker to the port of Montreal so the public could get a close-up view of the vessel. I attended the media visit on Saturday and spent a couple of hours poking around the vessel speaking to the captains that navigate it and the scientists and researchers that have worked on it.

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The CCGS Amundsen icebreaker docked at the Port of Montreal during the 2012 International Polar Year conference. Photo: Eilís Quinn, Radio Canada International.

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The captian's chair aboard the Amundsen. Photo: Eilís Quinn, Radio Canada International.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Amundsen's helicopter 'garage'. Photo: Eilís Quinn, Radio Canada International.

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Fire gear on board the Amundsen. Photo: Eilís Quinn, Radio Canada International.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Antarctic ice bergs. Does this continent offer a model for settling soveriegnty disputes in the Arctic? Photo: ANTARCTIC OCEAN ALLIANCE, AFP
Interesting discussion today at the International Polar Conference in Montreal, Canada during a panel discussion on Polar governance, Policy and Management.

Topics covered everything from regionalization in the Arctic education in Arctic 'micro-states' such as Iceland, Greenland and the Faroe Islands.

But some of the most animated discussion concerned the question from the public as to whether the Antarctic Treaty System model could be used as a model in the Arctic as a way to settle lingering sovereignty questions in the region.