The head of the RCMP says the police force is looking into whether any complaints about forced or coerced sterilizations have been made to law-enforcement agencies in Canada, but a preliminary review has not identified any.
RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki's comment is in a letter to NDP health critic Don Davies, who called on the Mounties in February to launch an investigation into all allegations of forced or coerced tubal ligations in Canada.
Dozens of Indigenous women say they've been pressured into sterilizations they didn't want or had them carried out without being asked when they were seeing doctors for other reasons.
The Saskatoon Health Authority publicly apologized in 2017 after Indigenous women came forward to say they were coerced into such procedures while a proposed class-action lawsuit has been filed against Saskatchewan, the federal government and doctors.
But while at least three federal probes have been launched, Lucki did not say the RCMP will launch its own investigation. Instead, she said any evidence of criminal activity should be reported to police — which at this point does not appear to have happened.
Neither the external review that led to the Saskatoon Health Authority's apology nor the proposed class-action lawsuit identified any complainants who had reported their allegations to the police, Lucki wrote to Davies on March 20.
"A search of our national database was conducted," she added. "However, no files of forced or coerced sterilization were found."
The RCMP will work with commanding officers in each province and territory as well as with other police forces to determine if any complaints of forced or coerced sterilization were made, Lucki said.
However, the commissioner said, "it is important that any evidence of criminal activity be reported to the police of jurisdiction where offences are alleged to have taken place so that they can be properly investigated."
In an interview, Davies expressed disappointment and concern that the RCMP appeared to be refusing to launch an investigation — particularly given the amount of information that has been unearthed in recent months about the coerced sterilization of women in Canada.
"I don't accept that as a condition of a police investigation that there has to be a complaint," he said. "There are facts in the public sphere and known to police that could lead to a reasonable belief that a crime was committed."
Davies, who worried that the Trudeau government and RCMP are not taking the issue seriously, said he plans to ask Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, who oversees the police force and is from Saskatchewan, to take a closer look at the matter.
An existing Criminal Code provision speaks to the involuntary termination of pregnancies. Another provision on aggravated assault applies to anyone "who wounds, maims, disfigures or endangers the life of the complainant."
But critics have said a legal void remains around forced sterilization.
In December, chiefs at a meeting of the Assembly of First Nations in Ottawa passed a resolution to support changes to the Criminal Code to explicitly criminalize forced sterilization.
The federal government has so far rejected the push to change the Criminal Code, saying existing provisions forbid a range of criminal behaviour including coerced sterilization.
The Senate's human-rights committee last week became the latest to probe such practices, with a House of Commons committee also studying it and the federal government working with provinces and territories to discuss the scope of the problem.
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