View Full Version : Canadian MPs vote to include seal skin on 2010 Canadian Olympic uniforms


Allen2
May 9th, 2009, 07:20 PM
Canadian MPs vote to include seal skin on Olympic uniforms
Mary Frances Hill , Vancouver Sun
Published: Wednesday, May 6, 2009

The federal government wants Canadian Olympians to wear a seal product — most likely skin — during the 2010 Winter Games to help protest a European Union ban on Canada’s seal hunt.

Members of Parliament from all parties voted unanimously Wednesday in favour of a Bloc Quebecois motion calling on the government to come up with a way to integrate seal pelts into the athletes’ uniforms.

“With the upcoming Winter Olympics that will be in Vancouver in 2010, the government has a chance to offer some concrete action to promote seal products,” Bloc Quebec MP Raynald Blais said. “Today we are tabling a motion aimed at studying the possibility to integrate into the Canadian athletes' uniforms. Is the government ready to act to save an industry?”

Canadian Olympic Committee president Mike Chambers said adding seal products to Olympians’ gear would not only mar athletes’ performance, but politicize the Games.

“I’m used to those in the political arena wishing to attach their issues to the Olympic arena,” he said from Lausanne, Switzerland. “But this is one … that will not and cannot be allowed to occur. It’s our intent for our athletes to remain free of the politics that arises in and around the Olympic Games. The seal issue, while important, is an issue that has become politicized.”

The Vancouver Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games would not comment, as athletes’ uniforms are the responsibility of the Canadian Olympic Committee.

Liberal MP Ujjal Dosanjh was among those who supported the motion.

“It’s an industry in the Atlantic and I believe that our caucus is unanimous in supporting it,” he said.

When pressed for details, he added, “I’m not going to say anything more than what I have just said to you.”

Federal Fisheries and Oceans Minister Gail Shea said the move would signal Canada’s support of the sealing industry.

“I would imagine that the Olympic clothing is all designed and probably made by now, but I think it’s a good symbolic suggestion to add something to the outfit of our athletes. I think it would be a good statement for the Canadian sealing industry and Canada’s support of it.”

Seal skin has made high-profile appearances in the past — even on the catwalk. Inuit designers such as Elisapee Kilabuk have showcased creations as diverse as motorcycle jackets to bustiers in international shows.

Chambers said he it’s “doubtful” that the MPs wishes would make any gains.
(THANKFULLY!)
“There are political issues all over the world,” he said. “If the IOC started allowing a patch on everyone’s uniform we’d all look like FI speed racers. Let the politics do the political thing and keep the sport to the games.”

Copyright © The Vancouver Sun


HOWEVER.....



Canadian Olympic Committee says no to seal skin uniforms



OTTAWA (AFP) — Upset by an EU decision to ban seal products, Canadian parliamentarians have proposed that Canadian athletes wear uniforms made of seal pelts at the 2010 Winter Olympics, but Games organizers on Thursday rejected the idea.

The European Parliament voted on Tuesday to endorse a European Union ban on seal products in protest against commercial hunting methods, provoking anger in Canada and a possible pursuit of redress at the World Trade Organization.

Canadian lawmakers unanimously supported a motion late Wednesday in the House of Commons urging the Canadian Olympic Committee to make athletes' uniforms out of seal pelts and for the government to promote sealing at the Games in Vancouver.

In a statement, national Inuit president Mary Simon expressed support for the motion.

She noted that Olympic organizers had borrowed an Inuit symbol -- a stone marker called an Inukshuk -- for the Games and urged them to "follow-through and support Inuit all the way. That includes our culture, and our culture includes seal hunting!"

Chris Rudge, head of the Canadian Olympic Committee, however, immediately dismissed the idea, saying there would be no seal skins used in the making of uniforms.

"We respect the right of Canadians and its politicians to engage in such discussions, but it's not the role of the Olympic movement or of our Olympic team to take a position on social or political issues," he told AFP.

The Canadian government maintains that the 350-year-old seal hunt is crucial for some 6,000 North Atlantic fishermen who rely on it for up to 35 percent of their total annual income.

bradleykerr
May 10th, 2009, 05:15 AM
I'm all for clubbing seals but I think it's really stupid for our government to be wasting time and resources on this particular issue.

koolio
May 10th, 2009, 10:31 PM
Wow ... those MPs should stfu and don't meddle with the Olympics. What a disgrace. Don't mix politics with sports ... PLEASE!

bradleykerr
May 11th, 2009, 01:12 AM
To those of us in BC the Olympics is a big enough disgrace as it is, I guess they just wanted the rest of Canada to feel the shame as well.

KGB
May 11th, 2009, 01:51 AM
It’s our intent for our athletes to remain free of the politics that arises in and around the Olympic Games.

Yea...and it might interfere with the Games as a giant corporate marketing scheme.

Get real...an Olympics with integrity was lost a long time ago, so that excuse aint gonna wash.

I think it would be a fantastic collective middle finger to all those knee-jerk, hypocritical anti-seal hunting nay-sayers.



KGB

dleung
May 11th, 2009, 02:10 AM
Can't believe the vote was unanimous... we are a stupid country.