Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Rights groups say Montreal inmate's death from COVID-19 highlights need for action

- JILLIAN KESTLERD’AMOURS

MONTREAL• Rights groups and families of detainees are calling for concrete action from the Quebec government after an inmate died of COVID-19 in a Montreal detention centre this week.

The 72-year-old detainee died on Tuesday at the Bordeaux provincial jail in the north end of the city, the groups said.

Ted Rutland, a member of the Anti-carceral Group, a Montreal-based prisoners’ rights organizati­on, said Quebec should release more prisoners to reduce the risk of COVID-19 spreading inside cramped facilities where social distancing is difficult.

Vulnerable detainees, such as the elderly and those with health conditions and detainees who are approachin­g the end of their sentences or who have not been convicted of a crime should be prioritize­d,

Rutland said.

He said the inmate who died was awaiting trial for drug traffickin­g.

“Quebec should be doing the most on this front, because Quebec is the worst affected by COVID, and Quebec’s prisons are the worst affected by COVID,” he said.

Questioned Wednesday about the death, Quebec Public Security Minister Genevieve Guilbault said measures to stem the spread of COVID-19 inside provincial jails are in place.

“Of course, we cannot avoid all cases because those are close living quarters,” Guilbault told reporters.

The Public Security Department said in an email that 60 inmates at Bordeaux are currently infected with COVID-19.

Spokeswoma­n Marie-josee Montminy Guilbault issued an order on May 6 to allow vulnerable prisoners and those who had less than 30 days left on their sentence to be released.

But Jean-louis Nguyen, whose partner is currently detained at Bordeaux, said few prisoners meet the current criteria for release.

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