Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Preliminary Search Finds No Reports Of Coerced Sterilization To Police: RCMP

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Apr, 2019 08:36 PM

    OTTAWA — The head of the RCMP says the police force is looking into whether any complaints about forced or coerced sterilizations have been made to law-enforcement agencies in Canada, but that a preliminary review has not identified any.


    In a letter to NDP health critic Don Davies, RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki says the Mounties searched their national database but did not find any criminal reports of forced or coerced sterilization.


    The letter followed Davies's request in February that the RCMP launch an investigation into allegations dozens of Indigenous women in Saskatchewan and elsewhere were pressured into tubal ligations.


    The Saskatoon Health Regional Authority has publicly apologized and a proposed class-action lawsuit has been filed against the province of Saskatchewan, the federal government, regional health authorities and individual doctors.


    In her letter, Lucki says the RCMP will work with commanding officers in each province and territory as well as with other police forces to determine if any complaints of forced or coerced sterilization were made.


    But she does not say the RCMP will launch an investigation and instead asserts that it is important any evidence of criminal activity be reported to police — which at this point does not appear to have happened.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Engineer Didn't Check For Right Materials On Stage That Collapsed, Inquest Hears

     An engineer who approved the plans for a stage that collapsed before a Radiohead concert in Toronto didn't check that the right materials were being used to support the roof because he trusted the contractor, a coroner’s inquest heard Friday.

    Engineer Didn't Check For Right Materials On Stage That Collapsed, Inquest Hears

    Federal Government To Unveil Plans To Mark The 75Th Anniversary Of D-Day

    The journey is part of the federal government's plan to commemorate the 75th anniversary of D-Day and the Battle of Normandy.

    Federal Government To Unveil Plans To Mark The 75Th Anniversary Of D-Day

    Montreal Priest Stabbed One Week Ago Returns To Church, Presides Over Mass

    Montreal Priest Stabbed One Week Ago Returns To Church, Presides Over Mass
    MONTREAL — The Montreal priest who was stabbed during morning mass resumed his duties one week after the attack.

    Montreal Priest Stabbed One Week Ago Returns To Church, Presides Over Mass

    Powerful Winds Create Towering 'Game Of Thrones' Ice Wall Near Newfoundland Town

    Brendon Gould of Port aux Choix said he stands over six feet tall but the wall was more than three times his height in some places.

    Powerful Winds Create Towering 'Game Of Thrones' Ice Wall Near Newfoundland Town

    Youth Facing Terror-Related Charges Back In Court For Second Day Of Bail Hearing

    Youth Facing Terror-Related Charges Back In Court For Second Day Of Bail Hearing
    OTTAWA — A youth charged with terrorism-related offences appeared in court Friday in Kingston, Ont., for the second part of a two-day bail hearing.    

    Youth Facing Terror-Related Charges Back In Court For Second Day Of Bail Hearing

    In Travel Advisory, Canadians Warned Of 'Acts Of Violence' Linked To Brexit

    In Travel Advisory, Canadians Warned Of 'Acts Of Violence' Linked To Brexit
    The department issued the updated advisory as British politicians rejected the latest attempt to coalesce around a path out of the European Union.

    In Travel Advisory, Canadians Warned Of 'Acts Of Violence' Linked To Brexit