National Post

Feds face calls for answers on Fortin

General was overseeing vaccine rollout

- Lee Berthiaume

• The federal government faced growing calls for answers from experts and political opponents alike on Sunday amid lingering questions about the abrupt reassignme­nt of the military general who was overseeing Canada’s COVID-19 vaccinatio­n campaign, as well as who may be stepping into his critical role.

The Defence Department announced in a terse three-line statement on Friday evening that Maj.-gen. Dany Fortin was stepping aside from his role overseeing the delivery and distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccine doses across the country.

The reasons for his departure were not revealed, aside from a brief mention of a “military investigat­ion.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s office and the Defence Department, including Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan’s office, have since refused to provide further informatio­n, including on the nature of the investigat­ion.

The government has also declined to say when officials became aware of the probe and whether Fortin was vetted before being appointed to lead the vaccinatio­n campaign in November. Nor has it yet indicated who will be taking over from Fortin as government­s across the country ramp up their immunizati­on efforts.

Experts say the lack of informatio­n underscore­s existing frustratio­n over a lack of transparen­cy within the military and Defence Department, as well as raising concerns about Canada’s vaccinatio­n effort.

“There is a lot of speculatio­n about what’s going on,” said Charlotte Duval-lantoine, an expert on sexual misconduct in the military at the Canadian Global Affairs Institute.

“Dany Fortin had an impact on everyday Canadians because he was responsibl­e for the vaccine rollout. So I think the Department of National Defence, at least in my opinion, has an additional duty to kind of tell us what’s going on.”

Nobody is expecting the Defence Department and government to reveal the specifics of any allegation, Duval-lantoine added. But she argued a lack of transparen­cy now undercuts already-shaky confidence that the military will hold top officers to account.

“There’s no question that type of secrecy is going to be an additional blow to the legitimacy of the military justice system and how the military regulates itself,” she said.

University of Ottawa law professor Penny Collenette, who previously served in prime minister Jean Chrétien’s office while her husband, David Collenette, was Canada’s defence minister, echoed some of those concerns.

“This is a huge operation we’re doing, probably one of the most important ever,” she said of the vaccinatio­n campaign.

“And we don’t know what the allegation is . ... We’re all at a loss. So that’s a vacuum

WE DON’T KNOW WHAT THE ALLEGATION IS . ... WE’RE ALL AT A LOSS.

of informatio­n, which is inexplicab­le to me.”

The Defence Department has taken a mixed approach to the release of informatio­n about investigat­ions into several other senior officers, revealing details for some cases but remaining tightlippe­d about others.

It has also approved media interviews by two female officers who are at the centre of allegation­s into the conduct of former defence chief Gen. Jonathan Vance and his successor, Adm. Art Mcdonald, despite ongoing police investigat­ions.

Conservati­ve defence critic James Bezan called on the government on Sunday to start answering questions.

“As the sexual misconduct crisis continues to rock the Canadian Armed Forces and now our vaccine rollout, the Liberals’ lack of leadership is making the situation worse,” he said in a statement.

“Justin Trudeau must be transparen­t with Canadians. Canadians need to have confidence in our military, and that starts with the government providing informatio­n.”

Collenette also questioned the government’s continued silence over who will replace Fortin, with the Prime Minister’s Office, Health Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada refusing to say who will now oversee the vaccine effort.

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