Lawsuit accuses B.C. government of coercing Indigenous women into sterilization
VANCOUVER — A proposed class-action lawsuit accuses the British Columbia government of “sexism and genocide” over a decades-long practice of coercing Indigenous women into sterilization and abortions.
The lawsuit filed in B.C. Supreme Court this week says the province had a law on the books sanctioning sterilizations for 40 years before it was repealed in 1973, though the procedures allegedly continued afterward.
The notice of civil claim says the practice had a “traumatic and destructive effect” that inflicted harm on Indigenous women and their communities, and was aimed at “eradicating” their culture.
One lead plaintiff in the case says she was handed paperwork authorizing doctors to tie her tubes for no “valid medical reason” just moments before a caesarean section procedure in 1983 at a hospital in Campbell River.