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Kathryn Borel's Public Statement After Jian Ghomeshi's Apology

Her response to Ghomeshi's apology explains why she chose not to go to trial.

When former CBC host Jian Ghomeshi apologized for "sexually inappropriate" behaviour towards a a former colleague, he did it in front of the woman who had filed the sexual assault charge against him

Borel, who waived the publication ban on her name for this case, had reported Ghomeshi to police on grounds of sexual assault, following an alleged incident that had taken place at her workplace. Borel said that Ghomeshi had assaulted her while she was standing near her desk.

Kathryn Borel, a former CBC employee, made a public statement after her case concluded with the former radio star signing a peace bond and making an apology in court. In return, the sexual assault against Ghomeshi was withdrawn, but his lawyer said the conclusion of the case was not an admission.

Borel spoke outside Old City Hall after the case concluded. Her full statement is below:

Jian #Ghomeshi complainant recounts how he sexually harassed her "every day" over 3 year period during time at CBC https://t.co/SxIqof4vC3

— Globalnews.ca (@globalnews) May 11, 2016

Hi everyone. Thanks for coming out and listening. My name is Kathryn Borel. In December of 2014, I pressed sexual assault charges against Jian Ghomeshi. As you know, Mr. Ghomeshi initially denied all the charges that were brought against him. But today, as you just heard, Jian Ghomeshi admitted wrongdoing and apologized to me.

It's unfortunate, but maybe not surprising, that he chose not to say much about what exactly he was apologizing for. I'm going to provide those details for you now.

Every day, over the course of a three-year period, Mr. Ghomeshi made it clear to me that he could do what he wanted to me and my body.

He made it clear that he could humiliate me repeatedly and walk away with impunity. There are at least three documented incidents of physical touching. This includes the one charge he just apologized for, when he came up behind me while I was standing near my desk, put his hands on my hips, and rammed his pelvis against my backside over and over, simulating sexual intercourse. Throughout the time that I worked with him, he framed his actions with near daily verbal assaults and emotional manipulations. These inferences felt like threats, or declarations like I deserved to have happening to me what was happening to me. It became very difficult for me to trust what I was feeling.

Up until recently, I didn't even internalize that what he was doing to my body was sexual assault. Because when I went to the CBC for help, what I received in return was a directive that yes, he could do this, and yes, it was my job to let him. The relentless message to me, from my celebrity boss and the national institution we worked for were that his whims were more important than my humanity or my dignity. So I came to accept this. I came to believe it was his right. But when I spoke to the police at the end of 2014, and detailed my experiences with Mr. Ghomeshi, they confirmed to me that what he did to me was, in fact, sexual assault.

That's what Jian Ghomeshi just apologized for: the crime of sexual assault. This is a story of a man who had immense power over me and my livelihood, admitting that he chronically abused his power and violated me in ways that violate the law. Mr. Ghomeshi's constant workplace abuse of me and my many colleagues and friends has since been corroborated by multiple sources, a CBC ``Fifth Estate'' documentary, and a third-party investigation.

In a perfect world, people who commit sexual assault would be convicted for their crimes. Jian Ghomeshi is guilty of having done the things that I've outlined today. So when it was presented to me that the defence would be offering us an apology, I was prepared to forego the trial. It seemed like the clearest path to the truth.

A trial would have maintained his lie, the lie that he was not guilty, and it would have further subjected me to the very same pattern of abuse that I am currently trying to stop.

Jian Ghomeshi has apologized, but only to me. There are 20 other women who have come forward to the media and made serious allegations about his violent behaviour. Women who have come forward to say he punched, and choked, and smothered and silenced them. There is no way I would have come forward if it weren't for their courage. And yet Mr. Ghomeshi hasn't met any of their allegations head on, as he vowed to do in his Facebook post of 2014. He hasn't taken the stand on any charge. All he's said about his other accusers is that they're all lying and that he's not guilty. And remember: that's what he said about me.

I think we all want this to be over. But it won't be until he admits to everything he's done. Thank you.

With files from Al Donato

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