Stabroek News

Canada’s Trudeau, facing groping allegation, says he apologized, did nothing wrong

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OTTAWA, (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a supporter of feminist causes, yesterday conceded for the first time that he had apologized in 2000 to a woman who accused him of groping her but insisted he did not feel he had done anything wrong.

Trudeau, whose government is working on new legislatio­n against workplace harassment, has faced Canadian media scrutiny in recent weeks about what happened at a charity fundraiser in Creston, British Columbia nearly 20 years ago.

In his first direct comments on the incident on Canada Day last Sunday, the prime minister said he “didn’t remember any negative interactio­ns that day at all”, but yesterday he said “I apologized in the moment” without giving details.

According to an unsigned editorial in 2000 in the local newspaper, the Creston Valley Advance, Trudeau apologized to a local female reporter for inappropri­ately “handling” her.

The allegation resurfaced last month after Canadian political commentato­r Warren Kinsella tweeted a picture of the 20 year old editorial and used the Twitter #MeToo hashtag.

Many women in the United States and other countries have publicly accused men in business, government and entertainm­ent of sexual harassment and abuse, giving rising to the #MeToo social media movement.

“I’ve been reflecting very carefully on what I remember from that incident almost 20 years ago and, again, I feel, I am confident, I did not act inappropri­ately,” Trudeau, 46, told reporters in Toronto in televised remarks on Thursday.

Trudeau, citing the increasing­ly open discussion in society about sexual assault, conceded the woman in question could have come away from the encounter in August 2000 with a very different interpreta­tion of what had happened.

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