Davidee Sappa is shown in hospital in Montreal after being attacked in his home in Umiujaq earlier this week. Sappa was discharged from hospital but is still under medical care, his family says. (Photo provided by the family of Davidee Sappa)

Umiujaq mayor discharged from hospital, recovering after attack

Nunavik police say Davidee Sappa was assaulted in his home on June 23; municipal employee faces charges

By Cedric Gallant - Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

After being badly injured in an attack earlier this week, Umiujaq Mayor Davidee Sappa has been discharged from hospital and is recovering well, according to his sister Mary Sappa.

Davidee Sappa was assaulted in his home on June 23, according to the Nunavik Police Service which released few other details about the incident.

A 47-year-old employee of the municipality, was arrested and charged with aggravated assault and breaking and entering, police said.

He appeared in court June 25. As of Thursday afternoon, his next court date had not been listed on the court website.

After the attack, Sappa was medevaced, first to Puvirnituq and then to Montreal for medical care. Police described his injuries as “severe.”

A photo from the hospital, provided by Sappa’s family, shows Davidee Sappa with numerous scrapes and bruises on his face and head, and stitches over his right eye and on his upper lip.

He was discharged from hospital on Wednesday and for now is staying at a hotel in Montreal, Mary Sappa said in a Facebook message to Nunatsiaq News.

“He has been sleeping a lot,” she said, adding doctors are keeping a close eye on him and have scheduled a follow-up appointment on Friday.

Mary Sappa lives in Puvirnituq and could not be with her brother at the hospital. She said she is “so happy to hear that my brother is OK.”

She didn’t say when Davidee Sappa — who was elected mayor in 2021 — will return to his duties.

Meanwhile, the incident has disrupted work at the Northern Village of Umiujaq office.

Akulia Anowak, the municipality’s assistant administrator, said in a phone conversation Wednesday that a lot of employees there have been off work since the incident.

Although his job is not related to payroll, Anowak said he has had to take on that responsibility.

“People have to be paid, and I have to help these people,” he said.

He added: “The [Northern Village] still has to be open, because if it closes, the water truck won’t be running, nothing would be running.”

Anowak declined to answer further questions.

Umiujaq’s treasurer Peter Tookalook also declined to comment on the events that occurred and the state of services offered by the northern village.

 

 

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(2) Comments:

  1. Posted by flabbergasted on

    This is so normalized in most if not all Nunavik communities. Most Inuit believe they are entitled to do whatever they want to do and know there will be no consequences. There is more violence occurring in Nunavik than any other part of Canada. No, it is not normal to be witnessing this sort of domestic violence on a daily basis. Its even worst when most Inuit are under the influence.

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  2. Posted by nunavik voter. on

    suspect could have just enjoyed the great outdoors this summer, but its outdoor acivities are now controlled in his favorite spot in Saint Jarome. merry christmas and happy new year in advanced criminal,, laugh out loud.

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