Inupiaq man living in Aklavik, N.W.T., fights deportation to Alaska - Action News
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Inupiaq man living in Aklavik, N.W.T., fights deportation to Alaska

An Inupiaq man living in the Northwest Territories, and married to an Aklavik woman, is fighting a deportation order that would see him sent back to Alaska.

Herman Oyagak has been living with his wife in Canada for the past 3 years

A man and woman share a big arms-over-shoulders hug. The man is smiling.
Herman Oyagak, right, embraces his wife, Carol Oyagak. He has been living in the Northwest Territories for three years but faces deportation to Alaska on Dec. 13. (Submitted by Nick Sowsun)

An Inupiaq man living in the Northwest Territories is fighting a deportation order that would see him sent back to Alaska.

In 2018, Herman Oyagak travelled across the Arctic by snowmobile so he could live with his wife, Carol Oyagak, in her home community of Aklavik, N.W.T., about 200 kilometres north of the Arctic Circle.

Three years later, the CanadaBorder Services Agency (CBSA) moved to deport him.He was arrested, taken to Yellowknife, andreleased on bond.

He's to be deported to Juneau, Alaska a city he has never been to on Dec.13.

"I don't even want to think about that date," said Carol."I don't even want to put into words how I'm going to feel or what I'm going to do."

Oyagak was deemedinadmissible to Canada due to criminality,according to his lawyerNick Sowsun.

He was convicted in Alaska of criminal mischief for property damage under $250 and, before that,of offences like burglary and poaching walrus off the Alaskan coast,Sowsun said.

Respected member of community

But since meeting Carol at a drum dance festival in Alaska, Sowsun said Oyagak has become a respected member of his community.

"Together, Herman and Carol started a new life," he said. "Herman became sober, deepened his connections to his traditions and culture, and he became rehabilitated Herman is now five years married, three years sober."

In Aklavik, Oyagak is a traditional harvester and is well-known for his knowledge of the land and the language. He is also a member of the local dance and drum groups.

"Ever since I've been here, I got to know everybody and everybody got to know me," saidOyagak.

Aklavikis "where my wife was born and raised [and] Aklavik is a good place for me."

The couple has received many letters of support from others in the community who do not want to seeOyagakseparated from his familyin Aklavik, where his wife's son calls him "dad" and her nearly 80-year-old mother calls him "son."

'An affront' to cultural traditions

The pending deportation is "not about protecting the community or Canada, it is about blindly following process," according toDuane Ningaqsiq Smith, chair and CEO of theInuvialuit Regional Corporation.

"Indigenous rights take legal precedence over process," he said in a statement against the deportation.

Sowsun is arguing that under the United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People and the Constitution Act of Canada Oyagak has the right to stay.

"The Inuvialuit and Inupiat in Alaska, they have very close cultural ties, social ties and blood relations," said Sowsun.

"They're both Inuit. And before the land claims process, they were considered to be one people. The land claims process separated them into two groups, and the border now divides families and friends. For these people, this border is arbitrary and it's an affront to their social and cultural traditions. They have been travelling across this border for thousands of years to engage in social and familial relations.

Yellowknife-based lawyer Nick Sowsun says the Alaska/Canada border is 'arbitrary' and an affront to the social and cultural traditions of the Invuialuit in Canada and Inupiat in Alaska. (Olthuis Kleer Townshend - LLP)

Carol saidshe is "really frustrated" with how her husband is being treated.

She said her family is not asking for much just that they not be penalized for travelling along the same route through the Arctic Circle that Inuit people have taken for "hundreds and hundreds of years."

"We just want to live our life," she said. "We just want to live our happy little life in our small town with our family."

Sowsun will askthe CBSA to defer the deportation order. Failing that,Sowsunsays he will take the caseto federal court.

A representative of the CBSA said the agency does not comment on specific cases. However, they said the agency "has a legal obligation to remove as soon as possible individuals who have no legal right to stay in Canada."

"The removal of someone from Canada follows a complex series of processes and recourse mechanisms that afford foreign nationals due process privileges, and it is only after such processes have been exhausted that the CBSA can remove a person from Canada," the agency said in a written statement. "The CBSA prioritizes the removal casesthat are subject to asafety and security lens.

"Serious inadmissibility cases (those involving criminality, national security, war crimes, humans rights violations and organized crime) are a top priority for the CBSA."

If Oyagak is deported, Sowsun said he would likely not be allowed back in Canada for many years if at all.

For the family, that would be a devastating outcome.

"It would just be so heartbreaking if I leave my wife," saidOyagak. "For me, it's kind of hard to believe all this is happening. I just can't believe all this is happening and it's happening now.

"We cry daily, wishing for the best. Praying for the best."