The News (New Glasgow)

St. F.X. grapples with sexual-assault allegation­s against football players

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The bucolic university campus is set in a small Nova Scotia town: A cluster of steeples, ivy-covered brick and stone buildings and manicured sports fields.

St. Francis Xavier University, an undergradu­ate-focused school with Antigonish County’s rolling hills as a backdrop, is a tight-knit community with small class sizes, a familial atmosphere and a strong spirit.

It also has a reputation as a party school, with rowdy weekends and a binge-drinking culture - one that is under scrutiny after allegation­s of sexual assault surfaced last week.

Two varsity football players have been charged with sexual assault. Both have been released with conditions and are set to appear in provincial court in January, police said.

The allegation­s first came to light after an 18-year-old woman reported an alleged sexual assault to Antigonish RCMP on Wednesday, Nov. 22.

She said the incident took place over the previous weekend.

During their investigat­ion, another victim - a 19-year-old woman - came forward and alleged that one of the accused had also sexually assaulted her, RCMP said.

She said the assaults happened on two separate occasions on campus, once in September and again in November, police said.

RCMP said Jonah Williams, 19, has been charged with three counts of sexual assault, while Tyler Ball, 18, was charged with one count of sexual assault. Both men played defensive back for the X-Men varsity football team, but their online profiles have since been removed.

The university administra­tion has responded by imposing immediate interim measures against the two students while an internal investigat­ion is conducted.

“One of the accused has been denied access to campus. The other has been granted restricted access to campus, only permitted to attend classes,” Andrew Beckett, head of student services and vice-president of finance and administra­tion, said an emailed statement. “It is important to note that arrangemen­ts are being made to allow continuati­on of course work remotely.”

He added that all student privileges have been revoked, including participat­ing in varsity athletics.

The allegation­s against the young men have not been tested in court. But the charges have rekindled a wider conversati­on about sexual assault allegation­s and universiti­es.

Although St. F.X. recently introduced new consent and sexual violence training, as well as a victim-centric sexual assault policy, such allegation­s underscore the need for greater awareness about sexual assault on campus, the student union president said.

“We can always do more,” said Annie Sirois. “But the fact that people are reporting these incidents is indicative that these education programs are working.”

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