LGBTQ apology closes dark chapter in Canada's history, Edmonton MP says - Action News
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Edmonton

LGBTQ apology closes dark chapter in Canada's history, Edmonton MP says

LGBTQ special adviser Randy Boissonnault says the apology means the government can acknowledge the past and be better in the future.

Apology shifts focus to discrimination faced today, LGBTQ special adviser Randy Boissonnault says

Liberal MP Randy Boissonnault, the special adviser to the prime minister on LGBTQ issues, says the apology will allow the government to focus on fighting discrimination that LGBTQ Canadians face today. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's historic apology to LGBTQ Canadians who were persecuted because of their sexuality closes a dark chapter in the country's history, says Edmonton-CentreMP Randy Boissonnault.

Boissonnault, who was appointed as the prime minister's LGBTQ special adviser last November, said the apology allows the government to continuebattling discrimination in the future.

"It marks the end of a really sad and tragic and horrible chapter in Canadian history," Boissonnault said Tuesday on CBC's Radio Active. "It allows us to acknowledge that discrimination continues and that we can do better."

The apology, delivered Tuesday in the House of Commons, was addressed to the LGBTQcommunity, including about 9,000 Canadians who were criminally convicted due to their sexual orientation between the 1950s and 1990s.

"It is our collective shame that you were so mistreated," Trudeau said. "And it is our collective shame that this apology took so long many who suffered are no longer alive to hear these words. And for that, we are truly sorry."

Trudeau makes LGBT apology

7 years ago
Duration 1:06
The Prime Minister apologizes to LGBT people who lost their careers in the military and security services because of the sexual orientation

Boissonnault, who was the first openly gay MP ever elected in Alberta, remembers being in university when members of the LGBTQ community were still being persecuted for their sexual orientation.

"People never recovered," he said. "People's lives were ruined. People committed suicide. There are Canadians who still have those criminal offences on their record, and they did nothing criminal other than fall in love with someone."

Boissonnault said the government is committed to clearing the criminal charges laid against anyone based solely on sexual orientation. It has launched Bill C-66 to also allow family members to clear the names of loved ones who have died.

After he and his team consulted with many LGBTQ people over the past year on behalf of the federal government, Boissonnault said Tuesday's apology was emotional and important.

"When you actually sit there and hold the hands of the people who survived this and lived through this, you cannot believe that this happened in Canada and it did," he said.

"That's why today is so meaningful."

Listen toRadio Activewith hostPortia Clark, weekday afternoonsonCBC Radio One, 93.9 FM/740 AM in Edmonton. Follow the show on Twitter:@CBCRadioActive.

With files from Aala Abdullahi