Madam Speaker, Motion No. 10, standing in the name of the hon. member for Saanich-Gulf Islands, proposes to amend clause 48 of the bill. This amendment would have the effect of maintaining section 24 of the Pension Act, a section that the bill would repeal. So what does this section say?
The new section 24 is amended to reflect that the Canadian Pension Commission no longer exists and that all its powers will revert to the minister.
This section concerns what happens when a veteran, for whatever reason, is sent to prison. In such cases, section 24 provides that the pensioner may be subject to certain sanctions including the suspension of his pension and transfer of the pension or a part thereof to dependants. Also, upon his release, his pension will be subject to reassessment.
We must understand the principles and moral issues that are involved when we give this kind of authority to the minister. On the week-end, I heard a broadcast on veterans of the Vietnam war: how it had affected them; how they coped with their memories of the war; how they had been rejected by their fellow citizens who were too anxious to forget about this shameful period in the history of the United States; how the deep psychological wounds and the terrible burden they carried as participants in this war made it extremely difficult for them to readjust to a society that would prefer to forget all about them.
Many of these Vietnam veterans are now leading a life of crime. We cannot dismiss the thought that there may be a connection between crimes committed and their wartime service. Of course, there is no excuse for crime as such, but we cannot be blind to the fact that behaviour is influenced by past experience.
Furthermore, being punished for a crime is one thing but entitlement to a pension is something else. To link the two would be to make a moral judgment that a modern society cannot afford to make. If a crime is committed, the Criminal Code contains all the provisions to punish the crime, and the courts are there to determine sentencing. That is one thing. If a veteran applies for a pension as compensation for a disability arising from his military service, the pension review system is there to determine his eligibility and evaluate the level of compensation to which he is entitled. That is another thing.
Let me give you an example. I used to work for a large Quebec company. I worked for 35 years, which entitles me to a pension. So, if, tomorrow morning I were to commit an offence, for whatever reason, and was sent to jail, would the judge be entitled to suspend my pension? No, of course not. I am entitled to what I am entitled to. The loss of my freedom is the cost I must pay for my offence. It is intolerable to think that the Reform Party wants to keep a veteran's pension from him as punishment.
This is the absurdity at issue. A retired person is still retired, even in prison. Similarly, a pensioner who is entitled to a disability pension as a veteran is still a pensioner, even in prison. A just society would not make payment for services rendered conditional on good behaviour.
It is as if we did not believe in our penal and our legal systems. As if we felt they did not do the job well enough and we had to compound the punishment with other penalties.
This is all in bad taste. It is the old right. I was hoping we had seen the last of a right that mixes up everything in the social contract everyone has a share in. Veterans deserve to be compensated for risking their life and for being wounded. We made this commitment long ago. It is a right, and, in my opinion, nothing and no one can take it away from them, because no one in this House can give them back their health or a limb they lost. This is why veterans have a pension. It is a disability pension.
We must not get it all mixed up and think that, because someone commits a crime, we have to take away not only his freedom but his right to a pension.
You can see why we cannot support anything so backward as Motion No. 10. We understand why the government used Bill C-67 to remove this archaic provision, which has no place in civilized society.
I hope veterans are reassured. As far as we in the Bloc Quebecois are concerned, we will not mix their rights with any other conditions whatsoever. We therefore oppose Motion No. 10.