Quebec declines talks with feds, provinces, territories on coerced sterilization
OTTAWA — Quebec won’t be part of a working group the federal government wants to examine claims that Indigenous women have been sterilized against their will.
A spokesperson for Quebec’s health minister confirmed on Thursday that the province last month declined an invitation to meet officials from the federal government, other provinces and territories.
Alexandre Lahaie, a press attache to Quebec Health Minister Danielle McCann, says the province is very sensitive to the issue of coerced sterilization and is already having talks with a number of First Nations in Quebec, noting that health care is within provincial jurisdiction.
In December, federal Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor and then Indigenous-services minister Jane Philpott contacted the provinces, territories and members of the medical community to form a group on what they called cultural competency in health care.