A new pan-Arctic Inuit organization is taking its case on seal hunting directly to the European Parliament on Thursday.
The organization called Inuit Sila is based in Copenhagen and has been defending and promoting Greenland Inuit seal hunters for three years, but has announced it is becoming a pan-Arctic NGO to include all Inuit and the important tradition of seal hunting.
They took their case to an EU meeting in Brussels Thursday, serving seal meat to delegates and announcing the expansion of the organization to include Inuit hunters from around the Arctic.
The European Union ban on commercially produced seal products in 2009, along with 40 years of campaigning against seal hunting, has virtually wiped out the market for seal products according to the organization.
A press release from Inuit Sila says the seal population is far from endangered and sale of sealskin is an important income for hunters living in a part of the world where you cannot grow crops. It says the annual Inuit seal hunt in the Arctic is 100 percent sustainable and that the catch is around 200,000 animals a year out of a growing seal population of around 12 million. It claims the seal population hasn't been this high in 200 years.
"It has always been the idea that Inuit Sila should be extended to cover all Inuit seal hunters in the Arctic, who are all affected by the EU ban," says Leif Fontaine a spokesperson for Inuit Sila in Greenland. "The consequences of the ban in Nunavut, Canada, are largely the same as in Greenland."
Related: The 2010 Eye on the Arctic report Seal Ban looks at how the EU policy is affecting Inuit in Canada:
Inuit rights activist Aaju Peter, now based in Nunavut, agrees: "We must stand together in this one case," she says.
"This applies to all communities in the Arctic, which are severely affected by 40 years of campaigns against seal hunting and now the EU's discriminatory ban."
She also sees this as part of a bigger Arctic movement of the Inuit people getting more united.
"Together we have a stronger voice internationally," Peter says. "On the whole, I believe that we must begin to orient ourselves more toward each other from east to west in the Arctic. If we are not united, no one will listen to us."
This story is posted on Alaska Dispatch News as part of Eye on the Arctic, a collaborative partnership between public and private circumpolar media organizations.