Article 6W5PN ‘Protect our future’: Alaskan Indigenous town fights ‘destructive’ uranium mine project

‘Protect our future’: Alaskan Indigenous town fights ‘destructive’ uranium mine project

by
Aisha Kehoe Down in Elim
from on (#6W5PN)

Panther Minerals set to start exploring Elim's land as Trump seeks to expand drilling and resource extraction in Alaska

For generations, the people of Elim have subsisted off the forests and waters of north-west Alaska: hunting caribou and bearded seals in the late winter, gathering bird eggs and wild greens from the tundra in early spring, and fishing the salmon run in the late summer.

The Inupiat community of 350 people lives on one of the state's most productive and biodiverse fisheries, an inlet of the Bering Sea called the Norton Sound. They refer to their land as Munaaquestevut, or the one who cares for us".

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