Toronto politicians push for ban on graphic anti-abortion signs - Action News
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Toronto

Toronto politicians push for ban on graphic anti-abortion signs

Graphic images depicting bloodied and dismembered fetuses have been appearing on giant placards all over Toronto and on flyers in peoples mailboxes, and now some politicians are taking a stand against them.

Placards shouldn't be 'thrust' onto people walking down city streets, councillor says

Members of the Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform demonstrate against abortion on College Street in July. (Natalie Nanowski/CBC )

Graphicimages depicting bloodied and dismembered fetuses have been appearing on giant placards all over downtown Torontoand on flyers in people's mailboxes, and now some politicians are taking a stand against them.

Sarah Doucette, a city councillor in the city's west end, has received hundreds of complaints from upset residents. Shecalls the images "disturbing" andsays she plans to proposea bylaw to ban the gruesomeanti-abortion signs.

"These are big blown up images. There's blood, there's gore, there's a lot of things there which should not be in people's faces on their local street," said Doucette.

The Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform (CCBR) is the Calgary-based organization behind the protests and flyers.

This summer its members have been seen on major intersections like Yongeand College streets, standing on all four corners with placards. The groupalso hands out pamphlets on the street.

'I wouldn't want my grandchildren seeing this.

"It's gross but I understand what they're doing, they're doing it for the shock value," said Teresa Furnari, after seeing the image of a dead fetus. "But I wouldn't want my grandchildren seeing this."

The group's flyers are also ending up in mailboxes across the city, something NDP MPP Peter Tabuns wants to stop.

He, along with two Toronto city councillors, Paula Fletcher and Mary Fragedakis, andToronto District School Board trustee Jennifer Story,is asking Ontario's attorney general to seek an injunction against the mailbox flyers, as wellasthe signs the group displays.

"People have a right to protest," said Tabuns. "But it's a different thing to thrustthese images onto people who could be traumatized by them."

Complaints in other cities

In Saskatoon, Calgary and Surrey, B.C., there have been complaints about the CCBR's methods, especially after children found the group's flyers in mailboxes.

Doucettesays residents have complained to police but were told that what the group is doing is notillegal.

"We're not saying that these [protesters] cannot be on our street handing out flyers, we're not saying that," said Doucette. "But there's a difference when you hand someone a flyer, because then they have a choice whether to take it or not."

CBC Toronto reached out to the CCBR but did not receive a reply.

Doucette wants to present a proposal to city council in October. Meanwhile, Tabuns said he hopes the attorney general will put a stop to the images immediately.