The Province

Freeze on promotions for military brass urged

Committee wants screening for misconduct

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — A parliament­ary committee has called for a freeze on all promotions and salary increases for the military's top brass until they can be screened for past incidents of inappropri­ate behaviour.

The request is one of several from the House of Commons committee on the status of women, which recently finished a months-long study of military sexual misconduct sparked by allegation­s against several senior commanders.

“Just as a security screening is needed to receive various security clearances, this type of investigat­ion would screen out candidates who would be inappropri­ate to lead the Canadian Armed Forces,” the committee wrote in its final report, released Thursday.

“Subordinat­e personnel must have exemplary leaders, otherwise any efforts to stamp out sexual misconduct and harassment will be doomed to failure.”

Committee members also called for an independen­t office that would investigat­e and report on the military, and to have the RCMP investigat­e sexual misconduct allegation­s where there are concerns about possible interferen­ce from the chain of command.

The committee was one of two panels looking into military misconduct, with the defence committee probing the government's handling of allegation­s involving former defence chief Jonathan Vance and his successor, Admiral Art McDonald.

Vance, who stepped down as chief of the defence staff in January and retired in April, has denied any wrongdoing. McDonald, who temporaril­y stepped aside as defence chief after a month in the job, has not commented.

The defence committee is in danger of rising for the summer without producing a final report due to months of bickering between opposition and Liberal members, the latter of which have been filibuster­ing for weeks.

In contrast, the status of women committee's 21 recommenda­tions appear to have been largely endorsed by all parties, with the NDP attaching a supplement­ary opinion that adds six more.

“The committee was informed by expert witnesses, including by survivors, that the working environmen­t in the CAF is hierarchic­al, male-dominated, based on patriarcha­l gender norms and highly sexualized,” the report reads.

“Changing the culture in the CAF and creating a safe, inclusive, and respectful working environmen­t is urgent.”

The committee's report coincides with an independen­t review that has been launched by former Supreme Court justice Louise Arbour, who will spend the next year drawing up recommenda­tions toward the same goal: ending military sexual misconduct.

It also came as the Conservati­ve Leader Erin O'Toole said Thursday his party will force the House of Commons to vote on a motion targeting Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.

Sajjan has been under heavy criticism since former military ombudsman Gary Walbourne revealed that he first flagged an allegation of sexual misconduct involving then-defence chief Jonathan Vance to the minister in March 2018.

While Sajjan and the Liberal government say he followed all proper procedures, O'Toole said during a news conference that the minister has consistent­ly failed victims of sexual misconduct in the military.

The Conservati­ve motion is symbolic, and O'Toole says it will be up to voters in Sajjan's Vancouver riding to decide whether he should continue to serve in Parliament.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Conservati­ve Leader Erin O'Toole says his party will force the House of Commons to vote on a motion censuring Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Conservati­ve Leader Erin O'Toole says his party will force the House of Commons to vote on a motion censuring Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.

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