Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Forces Say They Wants To Oust 77 Members For Sexual Misconduct

The Canadian Press, 28 Apr, 2017 10:50 AM
    OTTAWA — Military officials say they have moved this year to force out 77 service members found guilty of sexual misconduct.
     
    Many of the cases are older and none of the members have been released yet, as their files go through what the military says is due process.
     
    But the figure is being touted as a solid step toward defence chief Gen. Jonathan Vance's promise of eradicating sexual misconduct in the Forces.
     
    "I'm encouraged by some of the steps being taken to eliminate inappropriate sexual behaviour in the Canadian Armed Forces," Vance said in a statement.
     
    "We still have more work to do and we will continue to promote cultural change so we can rid our institution of this abhorrent behaviour."
     
    Officials also say military police plan to review more than 150 old cases of sexual misconduct reported between 2010 and 2016 but deemed unfounded.
     
    That includes having experts from outside the military, including social workers and others, look at the files and meet victims.
     
    At the same time, officials say the number of cases deemed unfounded has dropped from more than one in four between 2010 and 2015 to less than one in seven last year.
     
     
    National Defence released the figures in an update on efforts to stamp out inappropriate sexual behaviour.
     
    The last year between April 2016 and March 2017 saw 504 such incidents reported to military authorities.
     
    More than half of the complaints related to jokes, sexual language or other inappropriate behaviour.
     
    Another 74 were classified as sexual harassment and 47 were reports of sexual assault.
     
    Vance has taken a hard line on inappropriate sexual behaviour in the Forces following a series of media reports that described the problem as chronic and endemic.
     
     
    Retired Supreme Court of Canada justice Marie Deschamps, recruited to examine the extent of the problem, exposed what she called a sexualized military culture that was hostile to women and left victims of sexual misconduct to fend for themselves.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Malala Yousafzai Praises Trudeau's Refugee Policy, Urges Canada To Play Leading Role In Girls' Educa

    Malala Yousafzai Praises Trudeau's Refugee Policy, Urges Canada To Play Leading Role In Girls' Educa
    Yousafzai received the honour during a long-awaited and anticipated ceremony on Parliament Hill alongside Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, before an audience of dignitaries, MPs, cabinet ministers and diplomats.

    Malala Yousafzai Praises Trudeau's Refugee Policy, Urges Canada To Play Leading Role In Girls' Educa

    Man Revived By Friend After Fentanyl Overdose, Brantford, Ont., Police Say

    Man Revived By Friend After Fentanyl Overdose, Brantford, Ont., Police Say
    BRANTFORD, Ont. — Police in Brantford, Ont., say a man who suffered a fentanyl overdose was revived by a friend who used an opioid antidote.

    Man Revived By Friend After Fentanyl Overdose, Brantford, Ont., Police Say

    Woman Falls From 7th Floor Of Her Gurgaon Call Centre Office, Dies

    Woman Falls From 7th Floor Of Her Gurgaon Call Centre Office, Dies
    A 42-year-old woman employee of a call centre died after falling mysteriously from the seventh floor of the office building at Sohna Road on Tuesday, police said.

    Woman Falls From 7th Floor Of Her Gurgaon Call Centre Office, Dies

    Prof Apologizes For Complaint Against B.C. Judge Hearing Sexual Assault Case

    Prof Apologizes For Complaint Against B.C. Judge Hearing Sexual Assault Case
    VANCOUVER — A law professor who filed a complaint against a British Columbia Supreme Court judge hearing a sexual assault case has issued an apology, saying there were no grounds for the claim.

    Prof Apologizes For Complaint Against B.C. Judge Hearing Sexual Assault Case

    American Woman Makes Unexpected Guilty Plea In Halifax Mall Murder Plot

    American Woman Makes Unexpected Guilty Plea In Halifax Mall Murder Plot
    HALIFAX — An American woman has pleaded guilty in a plot to kill shoppers at a Halifax mall on Valentine's Day, a potential massacre avoided by a Crime Stoppers tip to police.

    American Woman Makes Unexpected Guilty Plea In Halifax Mall Murder Plot

    Former Mountie Sentenced To 15 Years For Torturing His Son

    Former Mountie Sentenced To 15 Years For Torturing His Son
    OTTAWA — A former RCMP counter-terrorism officer has been sentenced to 15 years behind bars for torturing and starving his young son in the basement of the family's home.

    Former Mountie Sentenced To 15 Years For Torturing His Son