Sexual harassment, Madam Chair, is not defined in our policy because it is included in the kinds of harassment covered by Canadian Human Rights Act. In that sense, our definition of harassment is actually broader than that in the Canadian Human Rights Act because in the Canadian Human Rights Act it refers specifically to the 11 prohibited grounds. We don't define sexual harassment because common sense would dictate that people know what sexual harassment is. It's an element of harassment that's of a sexual nature. That's fairly straightforward. We don't define it for that reason, and because we might then be obliged to define what harassment is based on national or ethnic origin or what harassment is based on sexual orientation. We give a fairly broad definition that includes all those elements that are contained in the Canadian Human Rights Act.
It does not include sexual assault. That is a separate area. That's covered under the sexual misconduct policy and is dealt with by the appropriate military justice and police authorities.