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N.W.T. RCMP to undergo focused sexual assault training
CBC
N.W.T. RCMP officers will take part in a new training course this spring for handling sexual assault investigations in the territory.
The training course, which will take place over two days, is tailored particularly for the N.W.T. It is in addition to Canada's standardized training for sexual assault investigations.
The course is a result of the NT Sexual Assault Investigations Review Committee (SAIRC), which meets twice a year to look over sexual assault cases in the N.W.T. where charges were never laid.
That includes reviewing files that were classified as "unfounded", having "insufficient evidence to proceed", or those labelled "victim/complainant declines to proceed".
The committee — comprised of community advocates, representatives from victim services organizations and RCMP — looks at 26 sexual assault investigations at random to ensure cases are properly classified and to identify "any systemic gaps or barriers," according to its yearly report.
Cpl. Jesse Aubin is the N.W.T. RCMP's domestic violence co-ordinator and represents the G-Division on the committee.
He says the new course is important to take cultural considerations into account and acknowledge limited services that exist in remote communities.
He said the N.W.T. is different than southern areas of Canada because of "the geographical distance and the isolation of some of the communities."
Louise Elder is the executive director of the Status of Women Council of the NWT. She said the new course is a step forward but that the Northwest Territories is "at the early stages of the continuum," when it comes to resources for victims of gender-based violence.
Elder has been a part of SAIRC since it began in 2019. She said she has seen improvements at each review but that the territory has a long way to go to better support victims.
According to a 2018 national survey from Statistics Canada and Women and Gender Equality Canada, 61 per cent of Northwest Territories residents over the age of 15 have experienced physical or sexual assault. That figure is second highest in the country after Yukon at almost 66 per cent.
The same survey indicated the Northwest Territories had the highest rates of intimate partner violence in Canada for the same year.
The high rate of gender-based violence in the territory is in stark contrast to the scarcity of services, Elder said.
She pointed to resources in other jurisdictions that offer sexual assault centres with specialized counsellors and court workers to support victims through the process.