The RCMP's watchdog says the national police force is addressing all 16 recommendations on Taser use that came out of the Robert Dziekanski case.

The issues range from officer training to regular testing of the potent weapons.

The Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP also said Thursday the force has accepted almost all of its 23 findings in an investigation of the tragic incident.

Dziekanski died in October 2007 after he was hit with a Mountie Taser at the Vancouver airport. He was en route from Poland to join his mother in Kamloops, B.C., where he hoped to begin a new life.

A video of the confrontation filmed by a fellow passenger, in which an agitated and sweaty Dziekanski is zapped repeatedly, was seen by millions of people -- stirring public outrage and sparking widespread re-examination of stun-gun use.

The Mounties issued new a new Taser policy last May, saying they would fire stun guns at people only when they're hurting someone or clearly about to do so.

The commission for public complaints released its interim findings on the Dziekanski case in December 2009. It concluded the conduct of the four members who responded to the airport call fell far short of expectations.

The Mounties made no meaningful attempt to de-escalate the tense situation, nor did they take measured, appropriate action, the complaints body found.

Last December, RCMP Commissioner William Elliott formally responded to the complaints commission, accepting all but one of its 23 findings. The force followed up in January with an outline of steps taken to address the 16 recommendations.