Caribou killing continues in closed hunting zone
Last Updated: Friday, November 20, 2009 | 9:51 AM NT
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
Innu hunters have been killing caribou in an area of central Labrador this week that has been closed permanently to hunters to protect the endangered Red Wine caribou. (CBC) Innu hunters continued to kill caribou in a closed hunting zone in central Labrador Thursday, with some hunters shooting at the animals from the middle of the Trans Labrador Highway, as the animals wandered down the road.
It's the second day dozens of hunters from Sheshatshiu were in the area, about halfway between Churchill Falls and Happy Valley-Goose Bay, which has been closed permanently to hunters to protect the endangered Red Wine caribou.
More than a dozen animals were killed during Thursday's hunt.
Wildlife officials said the Red Wine herd has fewer than 100 animals remaining. But Innu hunters like George Nuke believe some of the caribou in the region are part of the much larger George River herd and have migrated to the area.
"How can you tell what is a Red Wine [caribou] and what is a George River [caribou]?" Nuke said to CBC News. "To me, as with our ancestors, caribou is caribou. We don't set boundary lines. How do we know there's Red Wine here? No one has proof."
Dozens of Innu hunters from Sheshatshiu in central Labrador have been killing caribou in a closed hunting zone this week. (CBC) There was tension but no trouble in the same area a day earlier when the hunters were confronted by wildlife officers.
One man was arrested and conservation officers seized the dead caribou, along with a pickup truck.
An assault charge was laid against one of the hunters.
But there was no sign of conservation officers in the area during Thursday's hunting, which was sanctioned by community leaders as a form of protest.
Last year the Innu nation pulled out of a joint caribou management committee. They said they weren't being listened to.
Peter Penashue, the deputy grand chief of the Innu Nation, told CBC News on Thursday morning, before the hunt resumed, that the Innu hunters feel they have to protect aboriginal rights because the provincial government has been arbitrary in its conservation plans.
Natural Resources Minister Kathy Dunderdale said from St. John's that what the hunters were doing is illegal, and she finds their actions troubling.
"Conservation trumps everything. The Red Wine herd is an endangered herd. There's no reason to hunt these animals."
Share Tools
Latest Nfld. & Labrador News Headlines
- Burned by fiery crash, now scorched by thieves
- A Gander man injured in a fiery explosion at the town's annual demolition derby in 2008 has suffered another setback. more »
- Bring in 'anti-scab' laws now, NDP says
- NDP Leader Lorraine Michael says Ocean Choice International's use of replacement workers on the Newfoundland Lynx is proof that "anti-scab" legislation is necessary in the province. more »
- Fourth case of rabies found in western Labrador
- Four cases of rabies have now been confirmed in Labrador West, according to the provincial Department of Natural Resources officials more »
- TIMELINE: The Labrador search for Burton Winters
- Burton Winters was reported missing from the northern Labrador community of Makkovik on Sunday, Jan. 29. He was last seen leaving his grandmother's home on a snowmobile that afternoon. His body was found three days later on Feb. 1. more »
Top News Headlines
- Old Age Security untouched until 2020, Flaherty says
- Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says Canadians should expect no changes to Old Age Security benefits before 2020 or 2025, and details about reform would be outlined over more than one budget. more »
- Emailed rave rape pictures earn teen probation
- A teen convicted of emailing pictures of an alleged rape at a rave in Pitt Meadows, B.C., that were eventually posted by others on Facebook has been sentenced to 12 months probation for distributing obscene material. more »
- Prayer service held for Ontario van crash victims
- More than 300 people gather at a church in Stratford, Ont., to remember and support those affected by the collision that killed 11 people in Hampstead, Ont., earlier this week. more »
- SNC-Lavalin probe sought by Vanier's parents
- The parents of Cyndy Vanier — an Ontario woman jailed in Mexico amid allegations she tried to smuggle in members of Libya's Gadhafi family — want the RCMP to probe the actions of SNC-Lavalin, the company she was working for at the time of her arrest. more »
- Burned by fiery crash, now scorched by thieves
- Federal minister joins call for Labrador search review
- Protesters demand search and rescue improvements
- Move St. John's drive-thrus further away, city officials told
- Fourth case of rabies found in western Labrador
- Fishy smelling student sprayed down by teacher
- Space Station passes over Newfoundland
- Bring in 'anti-scab' laws now, NDP says
- Dead Labrador boy's family slams DND search 'failure'

