Bill to make forced and coerced sterilization a criminal offence before Senate committee - Action News
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Indigenous

Bill to make forced and coerced sterilization a criminal offence before Senate committee

A Senate committee studying a bill to establisha criminal offencewith respect to sterilization procedures heard emotional testimony from a survivor of coerced sterilization on Thursday.

'Its like you wiped out a generation,' says member of Survivors Circle for Reproductive Justice

A woman wearing beaded earrings
Nicole Rabbit, a member of the Survivors Circle for Reproductive Justice, speaks before a Senate committee in Ottawa on Thursday. (Senate of Canada)

A Senate committee studying a bill to establisha criminal offencewith respect to sterilization procedures heard emotional testimony from a survivor of coerced sterilization on Thursday.

"It's like you wipedout a generation," Nicole Rabbit, a member of Survivors Circle for Reproductive Justice,an organization for Indigenous women who are survivors of coerced and forced sterilization, told the committee in Ottawa.

Bill S-250 an Act to Amend the Criminal Code (sterilization procedures) would make forced and coerced sterilization punishableunder the Criminal Code by up to 14 years in prison.

The bill outlines what constitutes consent and safeguards for consent, such asgivingthe patient the opportunity to withdraw their consent immediately before the procedure. Italso says the medical practitioner must be sure that the request for a sterilization procedure was not"as a result of external pressure or someone abusing their position of trust, power or authority."

Nicole Rabbit, a member of the Blood Tribe in Alberta, spoke to the committee Thursday about her family'sexperience ofcoerced sterilization. Rabbit said she and her mother had both been coerced into sterilization in their late 20s, after each had four children.

"My daughter could have had more siblings;I could have had more siblings," said Rabbit.

"Our family would have been bigger."

Rabbit tolda Senate committeein 2022that she gave birth by caesarian section at the Royal University Hospital in Saskatoonin September 2001. After the birth, while she was still on the operating table, she saida nurse toldher that she "couldn't hold another baby" and a sterilization procedure would be in her best interest. Rabbit said she said felt pressured to say yes.

'I want an apology'

Rabbit said Thursday thather mother, who died last month,would have toldthe committeesomeone has to be accountable for the acts of genocide faced by Indigenous people in regards to forced and coerced sterilization and it must be stipulated in the Criminal Code.

"I want an apology for what happened to me," said Rabbit.

The law is the first of 13 recommendations made in a Senate reportin 2022.

The reportsaid the historical record of forced and coerced sterilization was "deeply troubling" and indicated that First Nations, Mtis, and Inuit women hadbeen disproportionately targeted, as well as Black women, and women with intersecting vulnerabilities relating to poverty, race and disability.

Sen. Yvonne Boyer, the bill's sponsor,said sheheard from hundreds of people who have been a victim of coerced and forced sterilization. She told the committee that most recently she received a call in December from an Indigenous mother who was sterilized without consent.

"This is a real issue that is happening today, as we speak and it is not one of the past," said Boyer.

Boyer told the committee the hope is that by adding this offenceto the criminal code it will give physicians sober second thought and stop physicians from conducting a procedure without proper consent.

The bill has passed second reading in the Senate and is before consideration by committee. It still needs to go before the House of Commons.