Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Indigenous Woman Alleges Coerced Sterilization In Saskatchewan In December

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Apr, 2019 08:02 PM

    OTTAWA — The Saskatchewan Health Authority is investigating a new complaint from an Indigenous woman who alleges she was coerced into sterilization after giving birth less than four months ago.


    The woman's lawyer spoke before the Senate committee on human rights in Ottawa on Wednesday.


    Alisa Lombard says her 30-year-old client was scheduled to have a caesarian section to deliver her third child at the Moose Jaw hospital in December.


    Lombard says the woman wanted more children and had never talked about tubal ligation until her doctor demanded she sign a consent form while she was on the operating table.


    Lombard says the woman signed because she thought she had to.


    The Saskatoon Health Authority publicly apologized in 2017 after Indigenous women came forward to say they were coerced into tubal ligations.


    A proposed class-action lawsuit was later filed and the law firm leading the case has said 100 women have come forward alleging they were forcibly sterilized.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Human Rights Tribunal Rules Anti-Transgender Poster Campaign Discriminatory

    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver trans woman who made a human rights complaint about a poster campaign that called transgenderism an "impossibility" has won her case.

    B.C. Human Rights Tribunal Rules Anti-Transgender Poster Campaign Discriminatory

    Nothing Could Be Done To Stop Emaciated Grizzly That Killed Mom, Baby: Coroner

    Nothing Could Be Done To Stop Emaciated Grizzly That Killed Mom, Baby: Coroner
    The service has released the results of its investigation into the deaths of 37-year-old Valerie Theoret and her baby Adele Roesholt outside their cabin near Einarson Lake on Nov. 26.

    Nothing Could Be Done To Stop Emaciated Grizzly That Killed Mom, Baby: Coroner

    OD Prevention Sites Possible At Canada'S Prisons: Correctional Service

    OD Prevention Sites Possible At Canada'S Prisons: Correctional Service
    VANCOUVER — Canada's prisoner service is considering opening overdose prevention sites as it expands a needle-exchange program that is now offered at a fifth institution for offenders who inject smuggled drugs.

    OD Prevention Sites Possible At Canada'S Prisons: Correctional Service

    Supreme Court Stresses Jail Should Be 'The Exception' For People Awaiting Trial

    Supreme Court Stresses Jail Should Be 'The Exception' For People Awaiting Trial
    The Supreme Court of Canada says making an accused person wait in jail before trial should be the exception, not the rule, in a decision that affirms a key legal safeguard intended to ensure speedy justice.

    Supreme Court Stresses Jail Should Be 'The Exception' For People Awaiting Trial

    Quebec Teachers, Religious Groups Denounce Government's Secularism Bill

    Advocacy organizations and citizens are denouncing the Quebec government's secularism legislation, saying it turns religious minorities into second-class citizens.

    Quebec Teachers, Religious Groups Denounce Government's Secularism Bill

    Quebec Bill Prohibits Religious Symbols For Teachers, Other Public Sector Workers

    Quebec Bill Prohibits Religious Symbols For Teachers, Other Public Sector Workers
    QUEBEC — The Quebec government tabled legislation Thursday to prohibit public sector employees in positions of authority from wearing religious symbols at work.

    Quebec Bill Prohibits Religious Symbols For Teachers, Other Public Sector Workers