Some Conservative MPs are asking the federal government to suspend the mandatory hotel quarantine policy in the wake of two reports of sexual violence.
Montreal police have arrested a Windsor, Ont. man alleged to have assaulted a woman at a quarantine hotel in Laval, Que.
The woman in question told La Presse that a fellow traveller forced his way into her hotel room, grabbed her and then started to undress while grabbing his genitals. She said security guards were slow to respond to her calls for help.
Meanwhile, a Hamilton, Ont. man hired and trained by Canada’s federal public health agency to work as a security guard has been accused of sexually assaulting a woman during a quarantine check this month.
Halton Region Police say the man, whose full name is Hemant, went to an Oakville, Ont. home on Feb. 18 to carry out a quarantine compliance check, demanded money for a bogus fine and then sexually assaulted a woman after she refused to pay.
Hemant was arrested Tuesday and has been charged with extortion and sexual assault; the police have warned that “there may be other victims.” He has been suspended from the security firm, which has not been identified by police.
“We are deeply angered to hear reports of sexual violence are happening during federally mandated quarantines by those supposed to be protecting public health,” said the statement by a group of Conservative MPs that includes health critic Michelle Rempel Garner and Shannon Stubbs, the Conservative public safety critic.
The MPs said travellers have a right to expect safe conditions at federally run quarantine sites and the alleged sexual violations are “unconscionable.”
“The Liberal government must take action now. We call for the Liberals to suspend the hotel quarantine requirement until they have put measures in place to ensure the safety of Canadians and institute a system for verifying at-home quarantine that doesn’t involve security agents who have not been properly vetted,” the MPs said.
All air travellers returning from non-essential international trips must stay in an approved hotel, at their own expense, for up to 72 hours while they await the results of a polymerase chain reaction test (commonly known as a PCR test) taken upon arrival.
While that program took effect on Feb. 22, some travellers were forced into quarantine facilities before that date because they did not have adequate isolation plans.
The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) has recruited security guards from private firms to conduct compliance checks on some returning travellers who are isolating at home.
Under the Quarantine Act, these “designated screening officers” can regularly visit a traveler’s home to ensure they are adhering to the mandatory 14-day isolation requirement. The officers are not police, however, and they cannot issue a ticket or conduct an arrest. They also can’t demand payment of any kind.
A spokesperson for Health Minister Patty Hajdu said the allegations are “deeply concerning” and are “being fully investigated.”
“The Public Health Agency of Canada is reviewing its processes internally and with service providers to ensure the health and safety of all returning travellers to Canada,” the spokesperson said in an email to CBC News.