Geopolitical tensions around Greenland and Russian activity in the North have refocused political attention on Arctic Canada, exposing long-standing infrastructure gaps that are undermining community well-being and national security, the president of Canada’s national Inuit organization said.
“Many times the rhetoric completely excludes Indigenous peoples and Inuit in our homeland,” Natan Obed, president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, said in an interview Wednesday in Tromsø, Norway.
Rather than investing in stand-alone military installations, Obed said, Ottawa should invest in dual-use infrastructure such as airstrips and ports that would serve northern communities and also support Canada’s military when needed.
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Obed contrasted Canada’s approach with Greenland, where Inuit political leaders take part directly alongside Denmark in international security and diplomatic discussions, citing Greenland’s Foreign Minister Vivian Motzfeldt joining Denmark’s foreign minister in Washington D.C. in January during talks aimed at easing tensions over Greenland.
“In Canada, we would never see Foreign Affairs Minister (Anita) Anand walk into a room in the United States with a democratically elected Indigenous leader as her equal,” he said. “That’s the type of thing that needs to change.”
Obed said that exclusion also overlooks one of the Inuit’s core contributions to Arctic sovereignty, the long-standing pan-Inuit ties across the Arctic despite national borders.
“We’re very fortunate that we have mobilized together across Greenland, Canada, Alaska, and the Chukotka region of Russia through the Inuit Circumpolar Council,” he said.
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Systemic racism and a heritage of FN genocide. There’s definitely progress on treating First Nations as an equal part of Canada, but not even close to making up for and elimination of the 200++ years of subjugation and genocide and the lasting social effects of that long term crime.
As much as Canada is seen by itself and a lot of the world as a very good, fair country…our past is full of dirty little secrets, and our soldiers have a penchant for dabbling in war crimes.
I’m Canadian. Some parts of my family have been in north America since the 1800s, and other parts were here before Europeans decided it was theirs. I love Canada…but loving it means that I feel a duty to bring up the dirty little secrets, and hold ourselves accountable for the shit we’ve done. There’s no way forward as an upstanding example of what a good and fair country is without exposing all of it and actually trying to make it right.
The way things are going, I’m not sure that will happen in my lifetime. If ever.



