Close X
Sunday, November 17, 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

    Man Arrested After Woman Found Dead Inside West Kelowna Hotel

    Man Arrested After Woman Found Dead Inside West Kelowna Hotel
    RCMP arrived at the hotel Sunday evening after being notified that a woman might need assistance and officers found the woman's body. 

    Man Arrested After Woman Found Dead Inside West Kelowna Hotel

    Halifax Shop’s 'Kinky Trump' Pride Week Doughnut Is A Mouthful

    Halifax Shop’s 'Kinky Trump' Pride Week Doughnut Is A Mouthful
    U.S. President Donald Trump — or at least a culinary version of him — may be rendered speechless after a Halifax-based doughnut shop released a new creation to celebrate Pride Week.

    Halifax Shop’s 'Kinky Trump' Pride Week Doughnut Is A Mouthful

    Man Extradited From South Korea To Face Trial For 2006 Slaying In Burnaby, B.C.

     A 12-year search has ended for British Columbia's Integrated Homicide Investigation Team with the capture and extradition of a man wanted for a January 2006 slaying in Burnaby.

    Man Extradited From South Korea To Face Trial For 2006 Slaying In Burnaby, B.C.

    Lightning, Wind Could Undo Weekend Progress Battling B.C. Wildfires

    Lightning, Wind Could Undo Weekend Progress Battling B.C. Wildfires
    Officials in British Columbia's southern Interior say the warm temperatures and gusty winds in the forecast could spell the end of two days of relief from wildfires raging in the area.

    Lightning, Wind Could Undo Weekend Progress Battling B.C. Wildfires

    Five Members Of Alberta Family Hurt In Crash On B.C.'s Coquihalla Highway

    Five Members Of Alberta Family Hurt In Crash On B.C.'s Coquihalla Highway

    MERRITT, B.C. — Five members of an Alberta family have been injured in a crash in British C...

    Five Members Of Alberta Family Hurt In Crash On B.C.'s Coquihalla Highway

    Abbotsford, B.C., Man Sukhpreet Grewal Found Dead In His Home

    Abbotsford, B.C., Man Sukhpreet Grewal Found Dead In His Home
    A missing persons investigation that began early Friday afternoon in Abbotsford, B.C., ended with the man's body found in his home.

    Abbotsford, B.C., Man Sukhpreet Grewal Found Dead In His Home