B.C. civil rights group sues federal government over prolonged confinement in prisons
VANCOUVER — A civil liberties group has filed a lawsuit against the federal government over prolonged solitary confinement two years after British Columbia’s top court ruled it is a violation of prisoners’ human rights.
Grace Pastine, litigation director for the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, says thousands of Canadians are still being isolated in their cells for 22 hours a day or more with little access to human contact despite international consensus that the practice amounts to torture.
The association says in a notice of civil claim filed in B.C. Supreme Court that such conditions infringe on inmates’ charter rights because they are exposed to physical, psychological, social and spiritual trauma.
It says wardens are isolating prisoners by using lockdowns to keep people in their cells for days, weeks and months at a time, and such practices have a disproportionate impact on Indigenous and racialized people or those with mental disabilities.