Civil rights group calls on Nunavut to review 14-day hotel isolation rules
IQALUIT, Nunavut — The Canadian Civil Liberties Association says mandatory isolation required of travellers by the government of Nunavut during the COVID-19 pandemic is out of touch with the law and latest science.
Since March 2020, the government has said anyone who leaves the territory must quarantine for 14 days in a designated hotel in southern Canada before flying back.
In a letter to Nunavut Health Minister Lorne Kusugak, the civil liberties group urges the government to review its travel restrictions, saying they don’t align with recommendations from the national panel on COVID-19 testing and screening.
The association writes that a seven-day quarantine, plus testing, would make sense for Nunavut travellers, given the territory’s high vaccination rates.