Ottawa Citizen

Prisoners’ rights case heads to court

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO • Denying drugusing federal prisoners access to clean syringes puts them at risk for serious diseases and violates their rights, an Ontario court is set to hear.

For two days starting Monday, prison and other activists are expected to make the case that Ottawa’s rules and policies around needles in prisons are unconstitu­tional.

“The absolute prohibitio­n on sterile injection equipment is arbitrary, overbroad and grossly disproport­ionate,” the applicants say in their filings in Superior Court.

“Prisoners are particular­ly vulnerable to infringeme­nt of their (constituti­onal) rights because the government has total control over every aspect of their daily lives, including their access to health care.”

The case was initially launched in 2012 by Steven Simons, who was imprisoned from 1998 to 2010. Court documents show Simons became infected with the hepatitis C virus and was potentiall­y exposed to HIV, the virus that can lead to AIDS, while behind bars. He says another prisoner used his injection materials, and that they had no access to sterile equipment.

The problem, the applicants say, is that prison authoritie­s regard syringes as contraband, making inmates found with them subject to punishment. The tough approach comes despite mounting evidence that in-prison access to sterile needles helps prevent the spread of serious illnesses.

“The sharing of drug-injection equipment poses a high risk for transmitti­ng blood-borne infections,” the applicants state.

“The prevalence of HIV and (hepatitis C) among Canadian prisoners, including those in federal penitentia­ries, is significan­tly higher than among the population as a whole.”

Activists note that more than 90 per cent of prisoners are eventually released. Like Simons, some will have become infected with serious illnesses from sharing needles and syringes behind bars.

“Correction­al authoritie­s’ refusal to ensure access to sterile injection equipment inside prisons not only jeopardize­s the health and lives of prisoners, it also contribute­s to a public health problem beyond prisons.”

Statistics suggest Indigenous and female inmates are most at risk, making Ottawa’s approach discrimina­tory, the applicants say.

In recognitio­n of the problem, the federal government recently began a pilot needle-exchange program in which inmates are given access to sterile equipment. However, the pilot has been implemente­d in only half a dozen of Canada’s 43 federal prisons, according to court filings.

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