The Niagara Falls Review

Canada-wide probe demanded over Indigenous sterilizat­ions

- KRISTY KIRKUP

OTTAWA — The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission heard concerns about coerced sterilizat­ion of Indigenous women during its years-long examinatio­n of Canada’s residentia­l school legacy, Sen. Murray Sinclair said Thursday.

Sinclair, who chaired the commission, was joining a chorus of calls for a national investigat­ion on the issue.

Sinclair said cases brought to his commission’s attention generally involved women who were under the supervisio­n of a childwelfa­re case worker or a social worker from a child welfare agency.

As chair of the TRC, Sinclair spent six years documentin­g Canada’s residentia­l school legacy — a government-funded, church-operated assimilati­on program from the 1870s to 1996 — and issued 94 recommenda­tions, including several involving child-welfare reform.

“It (coerced sterilizat­ion) was in fact an issue in Saskatchew­an that had been raised with us,” Sinclair, who was appointed to the Senate in 2016, said Thursday.

“We suggested that there needed to be an evaluation of the child welfare system’s involvemen­t in this.”

Sinclair now joins a growing list of people and groups, including Sen. Yvonne Boyer, Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde and Amnesty Internatio­nal Canada, who are concerned about allegation­s that Indigenous women were pressured into tubal ligations.

Any action forcing individual­s into sterilizat­ion procedures must be stopped immediatel­y, Sinclair said, adding the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide adopted in 1948 “immediatel­y comes to mind.”

Further investigat­ion should fall primarily on the shoulders of government, Sinclair said.

“They would have the ability to mandate an inquiry with the appropriat­e subpoena powers and the ability to summon witnesses before them to give testimony,” he said.

This week, the UN Committee Against Torture heard from Canadian representa­tives about concerns over modern-day sterilizat­ion of Indigenous women in Canada.

The UN committee is expected to release a report with comprehens­ive findings on December 7.

On Wednesday, committee rapporteur Sebastien Touze said forced sterilizat­ion must be seen as equivalent to torture.

He asked for Canada to examine specific criminal provisions related to forced sterilizat­ion, whether it is perpetrate­d by a public agent or private individual.

When NDP MP Niki Ashton commented on the rapporteur’s concerns in question period on Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called coerced sterilizat­ion of some Indigenous a serious violation of human rights.

“We know that Indigenous patients can face systemic barriers in accessing services, including discrimina­tion and racism,” Trudeau said.

“We will continue working with partners to ensure all Indigenous Peoples have access to culturally safe health services no matter where they live in Canada.”

Forced sterilizat­ion is also at the centre of a proposed classactio­n lawsuit in Saskatchew­an.

Alisa Lombard, an associate with a law firm leading a proposed class action on forced sterilizat­ion of Indigenous women, said Thursday that immediate action is required.

Any national investigat­ion into the issue should not prevent authoritie­s from moving ahead on action, she added, including outlawing forced sterilizat­ion in the Criminal Code.

Lombard’s firm, Maurice Law, has listed the Saskatoon Health Authority, the provincial government, the federal government and medical profession­als as defendants in its statement of claim for the lawsuit.

The court action was launched in 2017 by two of the affected women, who each claimed $7 million in damages. The number of complainan­ts has now grown to around 60.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Sen. Murray Sinclair heard concerns about coerced sterilizat­ion of Indigenous women.
DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS Sen. Murray Sinclair heard concerns about coerced sterilizat­ion of Indigenous women.

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