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Military rocked by allegations of sexual assault in published report

Watch above: Canada’s top military commander has ordered an internal investigation into the prevalence of sexual assault in the forces. Vassy Kapelos has the details.

OTTAWA – The country’s top military commander has ordered an internal review of programs and policies to combat sexual violence following a published report that says assaults in the Canadian Forces have reached epidemic levels.

Gen. Tom Lawson, Canada’s chief of defence staff, describes the allegations in the latest edition of Maclean’s magazine as “disturbing.”

Lawson says sexual misconduct is not tolerated within the military, a message he intends to reinforce throughout the chain of command.

The magazine, which hit newsstands today, contains a series of interviews with alleged victims, and uses access-to-information records to track military police investigations over a decade.

Lawson did not acknowledge specific cases, but says the military will pursue all allegations of sexual misconduct while protecting complainants from reprisals.

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In a statement from Mexico City, where he’s meeting with his U.S. and Mexican counterparts, Defence Minister Rob Nicholson says he’s ordered Lawson to get to the bottom of the matter.

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The issue has the potential to tarnish the credentials of the Conservative government and Nicholson, a former justice minister. Both have long championed tough-on-crime legislation and the rights of victims of crime.

Nicholson says he was “deeply angered” to read to the allegations.

The Maclean’s article comes just weeks after a pair of high-profile cases made headlines across Canada.

The former commanding officer of the army’s main training base in western Canada was found guilty of sexual assault in early April.

A military judge found that Maj. David Yurczyszyn, who was once in charge of CFB Wainwright in Alberta, groped a woman’s breast at a reception following Remembrance Day services in 2012.

At the beginning of his court martial, Yurczyszyn pleaded guilty to a charge of drunkenness under the National Defence Act, but he denied intentionally grabbing the woman.

Police in eastern Ontario also recently issued a public appeal for victims to come forward following the arrest of a soldier at Garrison Petawawa, Ont.

Cpl. Derrick Gallagher, 31, was taken into custody on March 31, and initially charged with eight counts of sexual assault and two counts of voyeurism contrary to the Criminal Code.

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Police later added 18 additional charges.

Investigators said they know of 18 alleged victims and are still trying to identify as many as 50 women who may have been victimized without their knowledge.

Full statement by General Tom Lawson, Chief of the Defence Staff, below.

Sexual assault is a crime. It is an abhorrent and corrosive act that goes against the entirety of our military ethos. I do not accept from any quarter that this is merely a part of military culture; it is not. Sexual misconduct of any kind is not and will not be tolerated within the CAF, and this is a message that I reinforce throughout the chain of command. We will pursue any and all allegations of sexual misconduct and we will protect complainants from reprisals.

As military leaders it is our duty to set a standard of respect in the workplace, to nurture that culture with education and training, and to ensure mutual respect through the clear and unambiguous enforcement of the policies and rules that guard the workplace.

In view of recent surveys which have indicated positive trends in workplace culture, the article published today is disturbing. I have directed an immediate internal review of our workplace programmes and policies, and leadership engagement. Further to this, I will consider options for external review.

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