TRC heard concerns about coerced sterilization of Indigenous women: Sinclair
OTTAWA — The Truth and Reconciliation Commission heard concerns about coerced sterilization of Indigenous women during its years-long examination of Canada’s residential school legacy, Sen. Murray Sinclair said Thursday as he joined a chorus of calls for a national investigation on the issue.
Sinclair, who chaired the commission, said cases brought to his commission’s attention generally involved women who were under the supervision of a child-welfare case worker or a social worker from a child welfare agency.
As chairman of the TRC, Sinclair spent six years documenting Canada’s residential school legacy — a government-funded, church-operated assimilation program from the 1870s to 1996 — and issued 94 recommendations, including several involving child-welfare reform.
“It (coerced sterilization) was in fact an issue in Saskatchewan that had been raised with us,” Sinclair, who was appointed to the Senate in 2016, told The Canadian Press on Thursday.