 They pigeonholed the whole issue into one community and then they sent their people in, the RCMP included, went in on behalf of these companies, the companies had their own security to come in and start to create divisions amongst the people. Assuming that the mining exploitation in our territories that is being imposed literally on blood and fire, that is to say that not only does the exploitation occur with the territories, and therefore the two things are linked to each other, the exploitation of the territories and the exploitation of the women's bodies. Over 90% of the women that we talked to did say that the mine had clearly created problems in the community. The most dangerous impact that resource extraction activity is having in Baker Lake is increased violence against women and girls. July 2010, until the end of September, there have been at least 72 Indigenous peoples killed, documented at least. Among the 72 are eight Indigenous women, one of them are pregnant when she was killed. But besides that, as they begin to participate, they begin to lead movements in defense of water, in defense of forests, So there is a stigmatization of the society itself to say that they are women who are no longer from the house, that women, as men like, are from meetings to meetings. The Inuit women working at the mine were mainly working as house cleaning staff for a predominantly male workforce. And so this did make them very vulnerable to sexual harassment. What we see across the world and in Canada on mining projects that are already in existence, the increase of violence against women because of the increase of revenue that leads to the increase of alcohol and drug abuse, which leads to the increase of domestic violence.