
Nunavik residents rally against alcohol and drugs, amid rising rates of violence
CBC
New police figures show violent crimes in Nunavik are rising, with national estimates finding the relative frequency and severity of violent crimes in Nunavik is nearly 20 times higher than the Canadian average.
There were 3,123 reported assaults in Nunavik in 2025, compared to 1,759 in 2023, according to numbers from the Nunavik Police Service (NPS). Sexual assaults, assaults on police officers, and assaults with weapons have all risen over the past three years.
The 2024 Statistics Canada severity crime index — a measurement of the relative number and severity of crimes — listed Nunavik's Violent Crime Severity Index score as 2,046.04. That’s compared to 97.04 in Quebec, and 99.87 across Canada, and it’s higher than the score of the three northern territories combined.
These are some startling figures for Jean-François Bernier to be confronted with, having only joined the NPS as the interim chief in November.
“It worries me, it's worrying for my police officers themselves. And it worries me also for the community members because the confrontation [happens] so often and it's violence,” he said.
Trina Qumaluk, who was recently elected as the president of the Saturviit Inuit Women’s Association of Nunavik, says violence affects so many women she knows.
"As women, as mothers, violence, arguments, being scared, it's a lot and it's heavy. This is one of the biggest issues we're trying to figure out how to deal with,” she said in Inuktitut.
Bernier attributes much of the rise in violence to the flow of drugs and alcohol. Puvirnituq, Kuujjuaraapik and Kuujjuaq are among the only Nunavik villages where alcohol sales are permitted, though much of it is bootlegged from the south.
There are also heavy struggles with addiction and suicide, compounded by intergenerational trauma and a lack of housing.
Lukasi Whiteley-Tukkiapik, the executive director of the wellness organization Saqijuq, believes the region is seeing a rise of harder drugs. It was the subject of a town hall meeting in his community of Kuujjuaq in December 2025.
“All these people were using alcohol as a coping mechanism. Unfortunately, I believe that they're starting to turn to harder stuff as well too,” he said.
There were 297 assaults on police in 2025 in Nunavik. Bernier says that’s even higher than the number of assaults on officers with the Québec City Police Service, despite the city having a population 55 times the size of Nunavik’s.
NPS has been involved in a series of fatal police-involved shootings of late. There were three between November 2024 and July 2025, and at the time, the region had rates 73 times higher than the Quebec average according to figures from the provincial police watchdog, Bureau des enquêtes indépendantes.
Bernier acknowledges those statistics, though he adds that he doesn’t know any police officers who want to use force for fun.













