Lethbridge Herald

Proposed assisted dying law called racist

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Those who support expanding access to medical assistance in dying are doing so because they have not grappled with the consequenc­es of medical racism, a disability activist said Monday before senators began debating the proposed legislatio­n.

“Bill C-7 is anti-working class, racist and ableist,” Sarah Jama of the Disability Justice Network of Ontario told a virtual news conference.

“(The bill) makes it more accessible for people with mental health disabiliti­es to kill themselves as a form of treatment without making mental health supports free.”

The 26-year-old community organizer from Hamilton, Ont., who is Black and uses a wheelchair, says racialized and Indigenous people in Canada who have been killed by the police should have been given mental health and disability-related support.

She said they also suffer deal with racism at hospitals when they seek medical assistance.

Joyce Echaquan, a 37-year-old Atikamekw woman, died in a Joliette, Que. hospital last September after she filmed staff making derogatory comments about her.

“I don’t want this in my future,” she said.

Bill C-7 would eliminate the requiremen­t that death be “reasonably foreseeabl­e” to qualify for an assisted death, but it also sets up two eligibilit­y tracks - relaxing some rules for those who are near death and imposing stricter conditions for those who are not.

Jama, who appeared before the Senate legal and constituti­onal affairs committee that was studying the bill last week, questioned how widely Justice Minister David Lametti and others have consulted when it came to how the bill would affect people with disabiliti­es.

Jama said legislator­s are listening to assistedde­ath advocacy groups she describes as predominan­tly representi­ng wealthier white people, who she argues are pushing for expanded access to the procedure because they are afraid to live with disability.

She said meanwhile, they have been neglecting the voices of people with disabiliti­es who are living in poverty, such as those living in homeless encampment­s in Hamilton.

“A lot of the people he consulted were upper middle-class white people, doctors and lawyers, and that’s not representa­tive of the disability community,” she said.

Jama also raised concerns about a possible Senate amendment that would put a “sunset clause” on prohibitin­g assisted death for anyone suffering solely from mental illness, saying that it could be seen as a form of treatment, without making treatment free.

Krista Carr, the vice-president of Inclusion Canada, told the news conference Monday that the focus should be on suicide prevention.

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