Stern's anonymous sexual assault complaints gaffe - editorial
Published date | 12 October 2021 |
Author | JPOST EDITORIAL |
Publication title | Jerusalem Post, The: Web Edition Articles (Israel) |
Later, in interviews aimed at damage control, Stern said he was just trying to speak out against a "culture of anonymous complaints" and that he had never shredded anonymous complaints about sexual assault.
He asserted that as an officer in the IDF, he "encouraged every soldier, male or female, who was harassed, sexually or otherwise, to complain, and at the same time took unequivocal action against anyone found guilty. All complaints… were investigated in depth."
Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, chairman of Stern's party, Yesh Atid, spoke with the intelligence minister and released a statement that accepted his denial that he had shredded complaints about sexual harassment. Yesh Atid, Lapid added, has zero tolerance for sexual harassment, and if Stern had admitted to shredding documents alleging harassment, the party would have departed from him immediately.
The Stern affair has brought out into the open the nature of complaints of sexual harassment, whether made anonymously or with full ownership. The resounding conclusion is that it shouldn't matter how they are made; such complaints must be investigated.
As Eve Young wrote in Monday's Jerusalem Post, the prerequisite that sexual harassment complaints be filed with the complainant's name highlights the lack of understanding of the realities faced by the victims.
In many cases, women don't feel they can complain openly about sex offenses, especially if they're serving in strict, hierarchal organizations like the IDF or the police. Investigations can be quashed and ambitions of advancement stopped dead in their tracks.
Look no further than the case of Colette Avital, the former Labor MK, who in an interview last week in Haaretz alleged that the late president Shimon Peres had sexually assaulted her twice in the 1980s, including one time when he was prime...
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