Remarks by Prime Minister Jean Chrétien
on the occasion of the signing of the
Ukkusiksalik National Park Agreement
August 23, 2003
Iqaluit, Nunavut
Everyone knows I love Canada's North and it is great to be welcomed back to
Nunavut - Our Land. Last fall, in Johannesburg at the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, I announced a five-year action plan to create 10 new
national parks and five new national marine conservation areas and to take
strong steps to restore the health of Canada's existing parks.
This is the most ambitious plan to expand and protect national parks and
national marine conservation areas in over a century. When it is fully
implemented, an additional area of over 100,000 square kilometres, the size of
Nova Scotia and New Brunswick combined, will be protected. In establishing
Ukkusiksalik as the newest National Park of Canada, we will be protecting over
20,000 square kilometres of extraordinary beauty and great history.
Growing up in rural Quebec, I fell in love with the rugged wonders of the
land. But it was really during my years as Minister of Indian Affairs and
Northern Development that I truly became aware of the dazzling, breathtaking
glories of nature and of all of Canada. The coastlines, the forests, the
mountains, the tundra, all bring inspiration and peace and they sustain us. It
is our job and our joy as Canadians to honour and preserve our natural
treasures. One of my proudest accomplishments as the Minister for Parks Canada
in the 1970s was creating ten national parks in four years. In those days,
creating a park seemed simple.
One time, while taking a flight from Pangnirtung to Brockton Island, we flew
over an amazing fjord. I said, "Aline, I will make a park here for
you." When I got back to my office, I consulted the Minister of Indian
Affairs, who was myself, the Minister of Northern Affairs, who was myself, and
the Minister for Parks, who was myself, and they all agreed on the matter. I
took out my pen and made that park.
Today, creating a national park is a much more complex and cooperative
undertaking. We work closely with Aboriginal communities. We have a deeper
understanding of shared responsibilities. The idea of a national park at Wager
Bay was first suggested 25 years ago. And in 1996, I promised the World
Conservation Congress that Canada would create this park. It has taken time but
it is worth the time to get things right.
We have worked with the Government of Nunavut and with a wide array of
interested citizens and groups in Nunavut. Most importantly though, we have
worked closely and negotiated with the Inuit. I am very grateful to the Kivalliq
Inuit Association for making today possible. The Inuit have been stewards of
Ukkusiksalik for thousands of years. The very name of the park speaks to its
glorious soapstone, an integral part of Inuit heritage.
The willingness of the people of Kivalliq to share such a rare treasure with
Canadians and with the world is a blessing. We will draw fully upon the wisdom
of the Elders and the knowledge of the 7,000 residents of Kivalliq in managing
the park. And we have reached a vital agreement that will see significant
opportunities flow back to the Inuit, particularly the young Inuit of Kivalliq.
What an amazing national park we are creating: an unspoiled watershed; an
inland sea; spectacular eight metre tides and a fabulous reversing waterfall;
glacier-polished islands; polar bears; falcon; caribou; muskox; snow geese;
golden eagles; and over 500 archaeological sites.
I want to thank the Government of Nunavut and Tongola Sandy, the President of
the Kivalliq Inuit Association. So many of you, including your Member of
Parliament, Nancy Karetak-Lindell, have helped us establish the new national
park. Through the creation of national parks, together we have now protected
over 100,000 square kilometres in Nunavut alone. It is a shared record to be
proud of and one that gives me a great deal of personal satisfaction.
Our national parks are among the world's jewels. They represent the power of
our natural environment and they tell the stories of our beginnings. They
connect us to our past, to our future and to each other. May all Canadians learn
from the Inuit and pledge ourselves to be trustees of nature forever.
Thank you et Vive le Canada.
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