The Peterborough Examiner

Feds to look at coerced sterilizat­ion

Indigenous women say they were pushed into signing sterilizat­ion papers while in labour

- KRISTY KIRKUP

OTTAWA — The federal Liberals are turning to a broad group of officials — from provinces, territorie­s, Indigenous groups and medical organizati­ons — for solutions to mounting allegation­s from Indigenous women that they were victims of coerced and forced sterilizat­ions.

Valerie Gideon, a senior assistant deputy minister in the Indigenous Services Department, told a committee on Monday that two cabinet ministers are co-signing a letter to their provincial and territoria­l counterpar­ts outlining the plans to discuss cultural safety in medicine.

The Liberals have been pressed for a rapid response to recent reports on the sterilizat­ions, which dozens of women say have been inflicted on them against their will when they gave birth.

Coerced sterilizat­ion amounts to a violation of human rights and medical ethics, Gideon told the committee, noting it is also a form of gender-based violence.

“Sterilizat­ion is not something that any one profession or order of government can address alone,” she said.

“Federal, provincial, territoria­l, Indigenous government­s and organizati­ons all have a role to play.”

Doctors and those who regulate the profession must be involved, she added, saying sterilizat­ion is a “matter of the practice of medicine” and that only surgical practition­ers can perform procedures such as tubal ligations.

Last week, the United Nations Committee Against Torture said Canada must stop the “extensive forced or coerced sterilizat­ion” of Indigenous women and girls in Canada, adding all allegation­s must be impartiall­y investigat­ed.

In question period Monday, NDP MP Romeo Saganash pushed Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott to detail what the Liberal government will do to implement the UN recommenda­tions, including holding people accountabl­e, providing redress for the victims and adopting legislativ­e policy measures to outlaw forced sterilizat­ion.

In response, Philpott said the government is working to make sure “this never happens again.”

She also stressed Ottawa will work with provinces, territorie­s, health providers and medical associatio­ns to make sure the “concept of informed consent is well understood and that culturally safe care is also well taught.”

Tubal ligations carried out on unwilling Indigenous women is one of the “most heinous” practices in health care happening across Canada, according to Ontario Sen. Yvonne Boyer, a Métis lawyer and former nurse.

In 2017, Boyer and Métis physician and researcher Dr. Judith Bartlett produced a report on Indigenous women who were coerced into tubal ligations — the severing, burning or tying of the Fallopian tubes that carry eggs from the ovaries to the uterus — after childbirth in the Saskatoon Health Region. The region subsequent­ly apologized.

Some Indigenous women interviewe­d for the report felt pushed into signing consent forms for the procedures while they were in active labour or on operating tables, Boyer said. Last year, two of the affected women launched a class-action lawsuit against the Saskatoon Health Region.

The proposed class action led by lawyer Alisa Lombard and her firm Maurice Law names the Saskatoon Health Authority, the Saskatchew­an government, the federal government and a handful of medical profession­als as defendants.

About 100 women have now come forward to report they have been forcibly sterilized, Lombard said.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Jane Philpott, minister of Indigenous services, stands during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Jane Philpott, minister of Indigenous services, stands during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday.

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