Vous devez activer JavaScript Go directly to the menu Site plan
  • Normal
  • Medium
  • Large

Les Archives de Radio-Canada

Home · On This Day · June 8, 1987

Manitoba moves to protect gays during AIDS crisis

Broadcast Date: June 8, 1987

Six years into the AIDS crisis the gay community remains a scapegoat for a disease that affects men and women, gay and straight, the world over. Nowhere is this more obvious than at the Manitoba legislature. In the park outside the legislature building, homosexuals are increasingly attacked in violent episodes of gay bashing. But inside the legislature, the Manitoba government moves to protect the rights of gays in a new human rights bill.

Manitoba moves to protect gays during AIDS crisis

• Homosexuality was a crime in Canada until 1969 when it was decriminalized as part of Pierre Trudeau's Omnibus Bill.
• Quebec included sexual orientation in its Human Rights Code on Dec. 16, 1977, making it the first province in Canada to pass a gay civil rights law. The law made it illegal to discriminate against gays in housing, public accommodation and employment. By 2001 all provinces except Alberta, Prince Edward Island and the Northwest Territories had taken this step.

• In 1979 the Canadian Human Rights Commission recommended in its Annual Report that "sexual orientation" be added to the Canadian Human Rights Act, but this didn't actually happen until 1996.
• AIDS was first noticed in homosexuals, but it is not a gay disease and never has been. In 2002 one in 100 sexually active adults worldwide is infected with HIV. Fifty per cent of them are women.

More AIDS facts (2002):
• More than 50 million people have been infected with HIV, and 18 million have died from AIDS.
• Every day 16,000 people become infected. More than a million babies are born infected with HIV each year.
• More than 2,000 Canadians test positive for HIV every year.

Also on June 8:
1824: Noah Cushing receives a patent for a washing machine; first patent issued in Canada.
1992: Canadian Space Agency chooses 4 new astronauts from 5,300 applicants: Chris Hadfield, Julie Payette, Robert Stewart, and Dafydd Williams.
1995: Mike Harris wins the Ontario election for the Progressive Conservative Party, defeating Bob Rae of the NDP who were in power since 1990. The Tories takes 82 of 130 seats.

Manitoba moves to protect gays during AIDS crisis

Medium: Television

Program: The National

Broadcast Date: June 8, 1987

Guest(s): Emile Ballantyne, Lois Beck, Ron Epp, Ronald Penner


Host: Knowlton Nash
Reporter: Usten Reinhart

Duration: 2:46

Last updated:
March 19, 2008


End of list




Check out another date
S M T W T F S
see all items for this month
Also on June 8
R.B. Bennett: Triumph in Canada's 'great dark days'
June 8, 1934
Canada's 11th prime minister says the determination that got Canada through the Great War will get it through the Great Depression.
Radio
10:08

Discover also
First World AIDS Day
Television
6:23
Dec. 1, 1988
As nations around the world cooperate to raise awareness of HIV and AIDS, there's unsettling news about Canadian attitudes towards the disease.
R.B. Bennett: Triumph in Canada's 'great dark days'
Radio
10:08
June 8, 1934
Canada's 11th prime minister says the determination that got Canada through the Great War will get it through the Great Depression.