Saturday, May 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Culture of the RCMP is toxic': independent report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Nov, 2020 06:54 PM
  • 'Culture of the RCMP is toxic': independent report

An independent report on harassment of women in the RCMP says fundamental change is needed to rid the national police force of a toxic culture that tolerates hateful and homophobic attitudes.

The report released Thursday by former Supreme Court justice Michel Bastarache says it is well past time for the federal government to take meaningful and radical action to address these issues, which have caused incalculable damage.

The report, "Broken Dreams Broken Lives," concludes that change cannot come from within the RCMP, but must be initiated from the outside. It calls for an in-depth, external review of the institution and the future of the force as a federal policing organization.

"One of the key findings of this report is that the culture of the RCMP is toxic and tolerates misogynistic and homophobic attitudes amongst its leaders and members."

Bastarache was the independent assessor who oversaw the provision of millions of dollars in compensation to 2,304 women involved in a class-action settlement.

While acknowledging that his team of assessors met only with those who had experienced serious forms of sexual harassment and discrimination based on their gender or sexual orientation, Bastarache says the accounts were consistent from decade to decade.

"The level of violence and sexual assault that was reported was shocking," he writes in the report.

"Indeed, over 130 claimants disclosed penetrative sexual assaults. Other claimants described a sexualized environment in RCMP workplaces.

"This was characterized by the frequent use of swear words and highly degrading expressions that reference women’s bodies, sexual jokes, innuendoes, discriminatory comments with respect to the abilities of women and unwelcome sexual touching."

Of particular concern in the context of policing was the denial, or the threat of denial, of backup assistance to officers, the report says.

Women who identified as lesbian, bisexual or differently gendered were subjected to ostracization, pejorative comments, sexual assaults and being outed without their consent.

"What the women told the assessors shocked them to their core. This process has forever tarnished the image of the RCMP as a Canadian icon," the report says.

"Bright, well-educated women said that they joined the RCMP seeking to help others, sometimes because they themselves had needed help as a young person. They told the assessors of the brutal treatment they experienced which ground them down, broke their confidence and shattered their trust in their fellow officers."

Many of the hundreds of women interviewed had been diagnosed with serious psychological injuries including major depressive disorder, post-traumatic stress, generalized anxiety, panic attacks and substance dependence.

Claimants also reported a lack of trust in the RCMP, a lack of trust in men, feelings of isolation, withdrawal from social activities, friendships and sexual relations, humiliation, lack of self-esteem and lack of confidence.

"Some reported intentionally injuring themselves repeatedly. Self-blame is common, even after blatant sexual assaults. We heard stories of women who sat with their service revolvers in their mouths and were only stopped from killing themselves when they thought of their children or their pets."

The report makes 52 recommendations on systemic barriers, recruitment, training, human resources and staffing, maternity and parental leave, employment flexibility, grievances and discipline, mental health, promotions, leadership, specialized teams and medical examinations abuse.

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey Homelessness & Housing Society Grants $600,000 for Local COVID-19 Response

Surrey Homelessness & Housing Society Grants $600,000 for Local COVID-19 Response
The swift response addresses the emerging needs of people experiencing homelessness, or who are at risk of homelessness in Surrey related to impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Surrey Homelessness & Housing Society Grants $600,000 for Local COVID-19 Response

Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October

Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October
October's increase compared with a year-over-year rise of 0.5 per cent in September. The increase was almost entirely driven by rising food prices, particularly lettuce and fresh or frozen chicken, Statistics Canada said Wednesday.

Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October

B.C. premier wants national COVID-19 travel policy

B.C. premier wants national COVID-19 travel policy
Horgan says he wants to see the same travel rules for Canadians regardless of where they live in the country.

B.C. premier wants national COVID-19 travel policy

Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau

Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau
Federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Wednesday that Canada will impose different requirements than the U.S. before it lifts the grounding orders for the plane, including additional procedures on the flight deck and pre-flight and differences in training for flight operators.

Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau

Canada to get 1st vaccines in January: Elliott

Canada to get 1st vaccines in January: Elliott
Christine Elliott said the country is set to get four million doses of the Pfizer vaccine between January and March as well as two million doses of Moderna’s vaccine.

Canada to get 1st vaccines in January: Elliott

No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO

No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO
Kevin Page makes the argument in a paper publicly released Wednesday that the government should move away from spending to stimulate the economy as conditions improve following the shock of COVID-19.

No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO