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Allan Rock calls University of Ottawa incidents 'repugnant'

University of Ottawa president Allan Rock calls two recent sexual misconduct scandals involving students "repugnant" as the school announces a task force on the matter.

School president launches task force, to report back in fall

University of Ottawa responds to incidents

11 years ago
Duration 3:21
Allan Rock announces task force to look into behaviour on campus after two incidents of alleged sexual misconduct.

University of Ottawa president Allan Rock called two recent sexual misconduct scandals involving students repugnant as the school announced a new task force on Tuesday.

Speaking alongside chancellor Michalle Jean, Rock said the university acted rapidly and seriously when it learned of an allegation of sexual assault against a female involving several members of the mens hockey team.

Rock said the school found out about the alleged incidents, which are reported to have occurred during a team trip to Thunder Bay to play two games Jan. 31 and Feb. 1, on Monday, Feb. 24.

He said he found out the next day, police were alerted, and the decision was made to suspend the team on Thursday, Feb. 27.

University of Ottawa president Allan Rock announces a task force on respect and equality on campus, at a news conference Thursday. (CBC)

That announcement was to be made that Thursday night, according to Rock, but Thunder Bay police asked university officials to hold off, because their investigation was at a sensitive stage.

The school announced the teams suspension on Monday.

Reminder of the pervasiveness of misogyny

The new "Task Force on Respect and Equality" will report back in the fall with specific recommendations on how to promote respectful behaviour on campus, Rock said.

He said members will work with a student-union led task force that he expects will be launched next week.

University of Ottawa chancellor Michaelle Jean, a former Governor General, takes part in a press conference on campus on Thursday. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

Jean said these types of incidents, which also include an explicit online chat about the head of the university's student union, are the tip of an iceberg when it comes to society as a whole.

"It is not a concern for women only, our campus only, it's a societal issue We all need to address this issue, she said.

What we were just brutally reminded of this week is the pervasiveness of misogyny.

Rock said hes been involved with the school for over 50 years and recent events stand in shocking contrast to what hes experienced.

He said as appalling as the events of the last two weeks have been, they can also serve as a catalyst for discussion and an opportunity he intends to take full advantage of.

Students punished

Rock also explained why students involved in both incidents havent been punished academically.

He said players on the mens hockey team cant use the schools rink and cant transfer to other schools to play, but the allegations havent been proven so it would be best to wait before deciding on academic sanctions.

When it comes to the five students involved in the chat, Rock said the student union asked administrators not to hand out academic punishment.

He added the task force will look at whether academic sanctions should be an option going forward.

Rock said the decision to suspend the hockey team was made because of the more than three weeks that passed between the alleged incident and when it was brought to the attention of administrators, along with information that came up during interviews with the coach.

He said the schools internal review will tell if the teams coaching staff did anything wrong and hopes this wont be the end of the schools mens hockey program.

New group brings recommendations

A new University of Ottawastudent group called Let's Talk About Rape Culturesent out a news release early Thursday before the news conference, saying these events are a "wake-up call to lift the veil on the all too common and often daily reality that is rape culture for women and men on our campus."

"This culture of rape, which is nothing less than the outright trivialization of all forms of sexual violence, cannot be swept under the rug and must be taken seriously by all, be they students, professors, union activists, employers, journalists, lawyers, etc.," the news release said.

Group members including students andmembers of the localstudent workers union said they had eight recommendations for the school, including creating a committee to look at rape culture policies and tools across campus, the creation of a women's help centre on campus and a day of public debate on rape culture.

Their website also includes a petition.

Anne-Marie Roy, the student union leader at the school and the target of the Facebook chat in which one of the participants suggested she be "sexually punished" said what happened to her is too common on campus.

"It seems like rape culture is very ingrained in the way some of these men are thinking, and it's very normalized so much so that discussing these matters in a private conversation is OK," she said.

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