Canada News
Human Rights Commission joins call for public inquiry on sexual violence in prisons
OTTAWA — The Canadian Human Rights Commission says Canada needs an independent public inquiry to address serious issues of sexual violence and coercion in federal prisons for women.
The commission is adding its weight to the call for such an inquiry made a year ago by the Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies.
The commission is “deeply concerned” by reports about sexual coercion, violence and abuse in federal correctional institutions and a lack of action to address the problem, said Chief Commissioner Marie−Claude Landry.
“A prison sentence deprives a person of their right to liberty, but it does not deprive them of their right to security. Sexual coercion and violence in prison is unacceptable and criminal,” Landry said, adding that Correctional Service Canada is obliged to protect and support the victims of these crimes.
The statement comes 10 days after a former prison guard at the Nova Institution for Women in Truro, N.S., pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting three women while they were inmates.
“We cannot expect the victims to report incidents of sexual coercion and violence without the proper supports and mechanisms in place to protect them from reprisal,” Landry said.
Sexual coercion refers to any non−consensual sexual act. It can range from unwanted kissing, sexual touching to forced sexual intercourse, according to a definition from Canada’s prison watchdog.
There are “considerable gaps” in how the federal correctional service investigates and prevents sexually problematic behaviours behind bars, according to the Office of the Correctional Investigator’s latest annual report.
Correctional Investigator Ivan Zinger recommended the public safety minister fund a national study into the prevalence of sexual coercion and violence, conducted by independent experts.
In January, Public Safety Canada posted a request for proposals to have a contractor explore just that, to identify the “nature and extent” of the problem among inmates who are Indigenous, racialized or otherwise at−risk, and suggest ways to intervene and prevent these crimes.
Zinger also recommended the government introduce legislation similar to the United States’ Prison Rape Elimination Act, which requires prisons to enforce a zero−tolerance policy toward sexual assault, and collect data on incidents that do occur.
Despite those recommendations, his latest report said the office “has observed no appreciable difference” in how correctional services prevents, tracks or manages these incidents, and continues to get complaints from inmates who have witnessed or experienced sexual coercion and violence.
“We continue to hear cases of alleged perpetrators simply being shuffled around within and between institutions as the preferred method for ’resolving’ formal complaints of sexually problematic behaviours,” the office said.
In its response to the investigator’s report, Correctional Service Canada said it’s developing a policy this spring on sexual coercion and violence in its institutions.
No one from the office of Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino was immediately available for comment.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 13, 2022.
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This story was produced with the financial assistance of the Meta and Canadian Press News Fellowship.
Erika Ibrahim, The Canadian Press