Sex-Selective Abortion Tag

09 Apr 2021 Hard At Work Defending Girls

Waiting. We don’t like waiting. Waiting for an appointment. Waiting in line. Waiting for the bus on a cold winter day. Keeping somebody else waiting. We just don’t like waiting. Those fighting for the cause of pre-born human rights can relate to this. They have waited and waited and waited for this issue to be debated at Parliament. Well, the wait is over. This issue of abortion is set to be tabled at the House of Commons. And this time, it’s about defending girls. Now that's worth waiting for. What an...

Read More

18 Apr 2017 Status of Women minister refuses to call sex-selective abortion gender-based violence

MP Rachael Harder MP Maryam Monsef The Minister responsible for the Status of Women has refused to outright condemn sex-selective abortion as “gender-based violence.” The issue came up during a Status of Women Committee meeting in Ottawa – a meeting that was considering gender-based violence. Lethbridge MP Rachael Harder asked Minister Maryam Monsef specifically whether she would make a connection between sex-selective abortion and gender-based violence. In an exchange that’s gone viral on social media (you can watch it here), Monsef responded that “violence comes at a spectrum; it can be physical, it...

Read More

24 Jul 2015 Highs and Lows of the 41st Canadian Parliament

On June 18th, the House of Commons adjourned, setting the stage for an election campaign that will end the 41st session of Parliament. This is an appropriate time to look back on the past four years and see what was accomplished, especially through the lens of ARPA Canada and the issues that we focus on. Pre-born Human Rights: When the Conservatives were handed a majority in the last federal election, many Christians hoped that pre-born human rights would finally be addressed. These hopes were in vain. Although some courageous MPs stood up for the pre-born, the leadership of all the political parties in the House of Commons did their utmost to suppress these efforts.   Motion 312, championed by MP Stephen Woodworth, was the first motion that held promise. It asked that “a special committee of the House of Commons be appointed and directed to review the declaration in Subsection 223(1) of the Criminal Code of Canada which states that a child becomes a human being only at the moment of complete birth.” Local ARPA chapters hosted presentations by Mr. Woodworth on this motion and many ARPA supporters encouraged MPs to support it. But with the party leaders all vocally opposed, the motion died in the House by a vote of 203 to 91. Yet Motion 312 reignited a discussion that was quiet for too long. Momentum for addressing this injustice was building.
Read More

02 Dec 2014 We celebrate Persons’ Day and yet still fight for personhood

October 18th is a special day in Canada. On that day, in 1929, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Counsel (at that time, the highest level of appeal in Canada) ruled that women were equal in law and were, in fact, persons. The case has become known as "The Persons' Case" and every year on October 18th, Canada remembers that case on "Persons' Day". (You can read the actual text of that judgment here.) On October 29th of this year, Ms. Megan Leslie, an NDP Member of Parliament, rose in the House and said the following: Ms. Megan Leslie (Halifax, NDP): Mr. Speaker, on Friday I will celebrate the 85th anniversary of the Persons Case with fellow feminists at a breakfast in Halifax for LEAF, the Women's Legal Education and Action Fund.  Professor Jula Hughes will speak on the history of legal disputes for abortion access in New Brunswick, which is timely, as its Morgentaler Clinic closed this summer. This was the only facility in the province where women could get an abortion free of restrictions, and it served women in New Brunswick and P.E.I.
Read More

02 Jul 2014 Report Card: Assessing Canada’s Conservative Government

The following article, "Report Card: Assessing Canada's Conservative Government on 10 Key Issues" was originally published in the Reformed Perspective magazine. It has been updated and included here as a reference item for our readers. You can download a PDF of the updated version, linked at the bottom of the text if you wish to print a copy. By Mark Penninga (Updated July, 2014) In a June 2011 article for Reformed Perspective I detailed 10 realistic goals that could be accomplished for our nation under this Conservative government if our leaders have the courage to lead and if citizens give them the encouragement and accountability to do so. Now that we are about halfway through this government’s mandate, how are we faring on these issues? 1. Give Aboriginals the responsibility and hope that belongs to all Canadians Grade: B+ Not long after ARPA published a policy report on this issue in 2012, we were very encouraged to see the federal government announce a number of bills and policies to increase accountability, equality, and opportunity for Canada's Aboriginal peoples. In June 2013, the First Nations Financial Transparency Act became law. Aboriginal MP Rob Clarke has also introduced a private member's bill C-428 entitled the Indian Act Amendment and Replacement Act. And the government has also taken steps towards allowing private property ownership on reserves and increasing parental responsibility in education. As encouraging as these changes are, they are small steps in light of the enormity of the problem. And given that the issue crosses into provincial responsibility, much more can also be done in having the provinces and federal government work towards a common vision. 2. Reform the Canadian Human Rights Commission Grade: C- In light of all the opposition from all sides of the political spectrum to problematic sections of the Canadian Human Rights Act, it is striking that it took a private member's bill (Brian Storseth's C-304) to finally abolish Section 13 in the summer of 2013. This was a huge victory, but the current government can't take much credit for it, apart from not actively opposing it. Much more can be done to reform or even abolish the Canadian Human Rights Commission.
Read More

18 Apr 2013 Letter from MP Mark Warawa

Dear friends, I wanted you to be among the first to know my decision about Motion 408 because your support has meant so much to me. We have already achieved so much, and yet there is still so much for us to do. When I made my decision to introduce Motion-408, my goal was to raise awareness that sex selection is happening in Canada. Canadians have responded to our efforts by supporting Motion 408 through thousands of letters, phone calls and petitions. Many of you as individuals and as organizations have been integral to this effort.
Read More

16 Apr 2013 Private Members’ Business: Is Brad Trost the next Mark Warawa?

CBC.ca April 16 2013: As Mark Warawa readies himself to reveal whether he intends to keep up his fight for a full House vote on sex-selective abortion,  another Conservative backbencher may be heading for a similar clash with his party's parliamentary power brokers, Over the last few weeks, Saskatchewan MP Brad Trost  has been quietly collecting cross-party support for his bid to boost the collective power of the Chamber by having MPs elect committee chairs via preferential ballot -- a move that  could dramatically curtail the government's ability to control the hand that...

Read More

26 Mar 2013 Mark Warawa challenges the soul of our parliamentary democracy

Wow, wow wow! Well over 4,000 people have emailed the Prime Minister and some of the committee that will hear Mr. Warawa's appeal tomorrow. And that is just ARPA and WeNeedaLaw.ca readers! Now the mainstream media is standing up for Mr. Warawa as well. Thank you very much for your leadership ARPA readers!  Find an excellent Macleans article about Mr. Warawa's fight to have Motion 408 heard here. Follow this issue at www.WeNeedaLaw.ca. Send MP Mark Warawa a note of encouragement as he challenges his own party and the entire...

Read More

22 Mar 2013 Breaking: Motion 408 deemed non-votable but MP Warawa Promises to Fight

Update: An EasyMail letter is now available (click here) that goes to your MP, the PM, and the sub-committee that made the decision to abort M-408. Please take 10 minutes to stand up for democracy. (WeNeedaLaw.ca) A Parliamentary sub-committee has ruled today that Motion 408 is non-votable. This means that rather than simply a debate over whether the House of Commons should condemn sex-selective abortion we are now going to have a debate about democracy. The sponsor of the motion, Mark Warawa has vowed to appeal this ruling and, if...

Read More

27 Sep 2012 Great News! Another Pro-life Motion in Parliament

Press release from www.WeNeedaLaw.ca, September 27, 2012: Surrey, BC - On the heels of a historic vote in the House of Commons on whether a study should be conducted into the definition of a human being, Conservative MP Mark Warawa has introduced a motion calling on Parliament to condemn sex-selective abortions. Mr. Warawa said in a statement released earlier today that, “92% of Canadians believe sex-selective pregnancy termination should be illegal.” WeNeedaLAW.ca’s mission is to work with Parliamentarians and Canadians in building support for legislation that upholds preborn human rights. “Motion 408 is something I would expect the vast majority of Canadians should support,” said WeNeedaLAW.ca director, Mike Schouten.
Read More