Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Group fights B.C. government's COVID-19 rules

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2021 10:58 PM
  • Group fights B.C. government's COVID-19 rules

A legal advocacy group is challenging the British Columbia government's COVID-19 restrictions on worship services and public protests, arguing they violate people's rights and freedoms.

A petition filed by the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms also asks the B.C. Supreme Court to dismiss tickets of up to $2,300 for alleged violations of the public health orders.

The Calgary-based organization says it represents over a dozen individuals and faith communities.

The challenge is based on several sections of the charter, including freedom of conscience and religion, and freedom of peaceful assembly.

British Columbia's Ministry of Health could not immediately be reached for comment.

The centre says in a news release that while the government allows hundreds to gather in big-box stores, attending worship services has been prohibited despite groups going to extraordinary lengths to comply with the guidelines issued by provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry.

It says allowing people to gather is essential for the spiritual and emotional well-being of many who go to churches, synagogues, mosques, temples or other places of worship.

"Affidavits have been filed attesting to the negative effect prohibiting in-person gatherings has had on individuals, including loneliness, depression, anxiety and fear," the centre's statement says.

The centre says the petition requires the court to weigh if the B.C. government has struck a legally permissible balance between public health objectives and the rights of Canadians.

“The undemocratic orders of Dr. Bonnie Henry restricting and even outright prohibiting the exercise of citizens' fundamental freedoms display a disregard of Canada’s constitutional protections," Marty Moore, a staff lawyer with the centre, says in the release. "This court challenge will require the B.C. government to answer for these divisive and discriminatory orders."

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec Woman Waiting For News Of Her Parents Trapped In Bahamas During Hurricane

MONTREAL - A Montreal-area woman says she's desperately waiting for news of her parents, who were trapped in the northern Bahamas when Hurricane Dorian battered the region as a massive Category 5 storm.    

Quebec Woman Waiting For News Of Her Parents Trapped In Bahamas During Hurricane

33-Year-Old Man Presumed Drowned Following Shuswap Lake Speedboat Incident

33-Year-Old Man Presumed Drowned Following Shuswap Lake Speedboat Incident
RCMP in British Columbia are searching for a man, presumed drowned, following a boating incident on Shuswap Lake east of Kamloops.

33-Year-Old Man Presumed Drowned Following Shuswap Lake Speedboat Incident

New Brunswick Police Consider Charges After Three Die In Car Crash

New Brunswick Police Consider Charges After Three Die In Car Crash
Police in New Brunswick say they're considering charges against a 28-year-old student after the car he was driving crashed, resulting in the deaths of three young men in the back seat.

New Brunswick Police Consider Charges After Three Die In Car Crash

Federal NDP Choose 'In It For You' As Slogan

The federal New Democrats have settled on "In it for You" as their English slogan for the upcoming federal election campaign.

Federal NDP Choose 'In It For You' As Slogan

Barenaked Ladies Musician Awarded $60,000 In Legal Battle Over Painting

A Toronto gallery must now pay tens of thousands of dollars to a Canadian musician who alleged he was sold a fake painting purported to be by the renowned Indigenous artist Norval Morrisseau.

Barenaked Ladies Musician Awarded $60,000 In Legal Battle Over Painting

B.C. Mother Who Smothered Daughter Must Wait 15 Years Before Applying For Parole

B.C. Mother Who Smothered Daughter Must Wait 15 Years Before Applying For Parole
A British Columbia mother found guilty of the second-degree murder of her eight-year-old daughter has been sentenced to life in prison without the chance of parole for 15 years.

B.C. Mother Who Smothered Daughter Must Wait 15 Years Before Applying For Parole