Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Calls For Provinces To Have Consistent Policies On Limiting HIV Prosecutions

The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2019 08:24 PM

    VANCOUVER — Advocacy groups are calling on provinces to follow the Justice Department's directive to stop unjustly prosecuting HIV-positive people for not disclosing their status if there is no chance they could transmit the virus to their sexual partners.


    The directive to limit prosecutions was issued in December but applies only to federal Crown attorneys in the three territories.


    Richard Elliott, with the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, says international scientific consensus on HIV transmission was reviewed by the Public Health Agency of Canada and informed the federal decision.


    Ontario amended it policies but in a limited way to no longer prosecute people with a suppressed viral load and Elliott says Alberta has said in a letter to the network it has done the same but without stating that in a policy.


    The federal policy goes further in saying people who also use a condom or engage in oral sex should not face serious charges such as aggravated sexual assault.


    The network is among others pushing British Columbia's attorney general to limit HIV prosecution.


    Elliott will be one of the speakers on the issue Tuesday at Simon Fraser University.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh To Run In Burnaby South Byelection

    Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh To Run In Burnaby South Byelection
    Singh announced his candidacy for the riding of Burnaby South, which former New Democrat MP Kennedy Stewart recently gave up so he could run for mayor in Vancouver.

    Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh To Run In Burnaby South Byelection

    Cost To Twin Trans Mountain Pipeline Now $1.9B Higher, Kinder Morgan Says

    Cost To Twin Trans Mountain Pipeline Now $1.9B Higher, Kinder Morgan Says
    Kinder Morgan Canada documents say expanding the Trans Mountain pipeline will cost the federal government another $1.9 billion beyond the company's original construction estimate and will take another full year to complete.

    Cost To Twin Trans Mountain Pipeline Now $1.9B Higher, Kinder Morgan Says

    Girl Injured By Ricochet While Conservation Officer Dealt With Problem Bears

    Girl Injured By Ricochet While Conservation Officer Dealt With Problem Bears
    Police and Saskatchewan government officials are investigating after they say a girl was struck by a shotgun fragment while a conservation officer was dealing with a group of bears at an outfitting camp.

    Girl Injured By Ricochet While Conservation Officer Dealt With Problem Bears

    Emergency Rescue Efforts For Endangered Killer Whale Hit Snag In Canada

    An endangered killer whale that has prompted an international rescue effort won't receive antibiotics by dart or by fish if it's found in Canadian water.

    Emergency Rescue Efforts For Endangered Killer Whale Hit Snag In Canada

    Boys, 9 And 11, Killed When Tractor Pulling Trailer Rolls On Alberta Road

    Boys, 9 And 11, Killed When Tractor Pulling Trailer Rolls On Alberta Road
    Two children have died after they were riding on a flatbed trailer being pulled by a tractor that rolled in southern Alberta.

    Boys, 9 And 11, Killed When Tractor Pulling Trailer Rolls On Alberta Road

    Temperatures In Some Parts Of B.C. Could Reach 40

    Temperatures In Some Parts Of B.C. Could Reach 40
     Hot air coming up from the Unites States has prompted Environment Canada to issue special weather warnings for several areas of southeastern B.C.

    Temperatures In Some Parts Of B.C. Could Reach 40