Quebec's Student Crisis Law Stokes Unrest

CBC  |  Posted: Updated: 05/20/2012 6:34 am


The adoption of emergency legislation to end Quebec's escalating student crisis stoked fiery debate across the province overnight, from highly charged street protests that lasted into the wee hours to harsh editorials and some calls for civil disobedience.


Legal experts, civil-rights groups, unions and student groups blasted the Liberal government's hardline Bill 78, which sets strict regulations for public demonstrations and student groups that organize gatherings, with heavy financial penalties for violations.


A full-page advertisement paid for by the Quebec government to explain the law was flanked by other ads from civil society groups alarmed by what they call "draconian" measures to contain the tuition hike crisis.


One of Quebec's teachers' unions – FAE –placed an ad with Premier Jean Charest's face and a headline that says "shame has a face."


"We don't have that many means to express our indignation," said FAE president Pierre Saint-Germain, in an interview with CBC's French-language service on Saturday.


"I'll tell you, frankly, that with this bludgeon law, it's becoming harder and harder for people and organizations, from students to unions, to express themselves publicly."


Montreal newspaper Le Devoir published an editorial titled "Abuse of power" and called on the Liberal government to seek mediation in the ongoing student protest.


Constitutional lawyer Julius Grey calls Bill 78 a "terrible law" that suspends the freedom to association, express and protest, without sufficient reason.


"What I note in this law is that there is no opening for discussion — what kind of education we want to have, is higher education a question of preparing for the job market, or a more academic question, to promote learning? There is none of that.


"This is simply an attempt to end a debate, to appear strong and determined."


John Gomery, the former Quebec Superior Court judge, described the legislation as part of the "extreme reaction this debate has provoked."


Bill 78 does limit freedom of expression, Gomery said, but the question is "whether or not that limitation is reasonable."


Law's passage met with protests across province


The law has three prongs — it suspends winter semesters at schools where students have boycotted classes; stipulates steep financial penalties for those who try to block access to schools; and restricts public protests.


Politicians debated through the night on Thursday, finally voting the legislation in late Friday.


Hours later, an estimated 10,000 people took to the streets in Montreal, where nightly protests have been held during the three-month old tuition crisis.


The Montreal march flared up midway when police reported Molotov cocktails, and responded with tear gas.


But the long procession continued its winding path from downtown to the Plateau Mont-Royal, where firecrackers exploded and helicopters hovered past 2 a.m.


Montreal's protest was fuelled also by the passage of a controversial municipal bylaw banning masks at public demonstrations.


The bylaw officially takes effect Saturday.


Protests were also held in Quebec City, Sherbrooke, Trois-Rivières and the Saguenay.


Critics blast Law 78


Quebec's special legislation reminds the province's nurses federation of their bitter 1999 conflict with the province, when the Parti Québécois government made it illegal for members to strike.


Nurses faced heavy fines, both as individuals and as a union.


"That government was very rigid, and the openness wasn't there, and that's what we feel is creating difficulties today," said Roberto Bomba, treasurer of the Fédération interprofessionelle de la Santé du Québec.


"People have to sit down and find a compromise, and find a solution."


The current Liberal government says Law 78 will "allow our students the right to go to their classes," said Justice Minister Jean-Marc Fournier.


But many students are deeply offended by the government's ultimate response in the conflict.


"They're telling us to shut up, they're telling us we can't say what we want to say, we can't do what we want to do, but I don't think it's going to work," said Quebec student Arianne Papillon, who marched Friday night.


Student group CLASSE vows to take legal action against the legislation as early as Tuesday.


"It's one of the basis of democracy, that citizens are allowed to go [in the streets] whenever they want, wherever they want.


With this law, this government is consciously breaking, destroying this fundamental right," said CLASSE spokesperson Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois. "It's unacceptable, and if we need to break this law, we will seriously consider it."


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The adoption of emergency legislation to end Quebec's escalating student crisis stoked fiery debate across the province overnight, from highly charged street protests that lasted into the...
The adoption of emergency legislation to end Quebec's escalating student crisis stoked fiery debate across the province overnight, from highly charged street protests that lasted into the...
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09:40 AM on 05/21/2012
When dealing with civil servants, the government is fine with paying salaries & benefits well above what they could make in the private sector. This is true at the federal, provincial and municipal levels. In Montreal in recent years, thugs in the bus maintenance union vandalized buses and sabotaged the system. Where were the police then? Where were the special laws and prosecutions? Oh yes, now I remember....they were rewarded with increased salaries and benefits.

But for nurses and students, suddenly the government is kick-ass tough: paying only lip service to consultation and negotiation; calling up the storm-troopers and levying heavy fines.

The provincial education department is full of thousands of make-work employees who never see a student they are not related to. The government spends millions on new 'regimes pedagogique' that are never fully explained to teachers or even fully implemented before the next 'regime' gets created. Waste and overspending abound at the provincial level, but students are seen as the bad guys?

Yes, this legislation is heavy-handed and provocative, and it's no wonder the students are angry.
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Another Pesky Canadian
Talk - action = 0
10:27 PM on 05/20/2012
Troll stew on the menu again, I see. Way to contribute, guys.
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turkeylurky
Just keepin it real........
02:58 PM on 05/20/2012
Yah, 'cause before the "emergency law", everything was nice and peaceful.
01:35 PM on 05/20/2012
This is getting ridiculous. As a student myself, this is dangerous to those around them, to the students who want to go to class, and teachers and profs. This is not democracy, this is anarchy.
Throwing a tantrum may get attention, but it will get the wrong kind. These kids already pay the lowest tuition rates in North America, and will continue to do so even with this slight increase. Quebec pays higher taxes, yes, because everything is heavily subsidized, from daycare to tuition. Enough already.
01:26 AM on 05/21/2012
Yes, lets all gradually become a slave of the financial system. As a student yourself, you probably have the money from your parents or other sources to pay for your education. Others have nothing.
paintitblacker
shit happens life goes on
05:38 AM on 05/20/2012
seems to me that there's a concerted effort to discredit any kind of protest any where,look no further than what happened in Chicago. Protest is changing for the worse and i don't think its all on the students,maby its time to change the way we do protest, instead of waving a placard that sez down with banks , maby we should just boycott a particular bank. you can even wear a mask while you sit at home and not use the services of a specific bank. so to the students in que find out which bank the university deals with and boycott that bank
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06:53 PM on 05/19/2012
I am more than willing to put money down for this.

The Québec students may lose this battle but will end up winning the war, eventually.
08:02 PM on 05/19/2012
Like the Quebec nurses won in 1999? Yeah, right, thirteen years later they are still the lowest paid nurses in Canada and unlike the students the nurses have been doing real work! Is the money you are willing to put down part of the Quebec IOU of 250 billion dollars?
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10:12 PM on 05/19/2012
Stop watching Sun News.

That would help.
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logicanada
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06:11 PM on 05/19/2012
Odd how a supposedly Liberal Minister of Education feels the desire and need to appoint herself as the ultimate authority on security, penalties and fines in the matter of free speech and the right to peaceful assembly. This has nothing to do with student access to higher learning and everything to do with an attempt at the type of lockstep control over intelligent people who feel wronged by this education minister. Hitler himself couldn't have contrived a more fascist sounding set of conditions.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
02:12 AM on 05/20/2012
"Hitler himself couldn't have contrived a more fascist sounding set of conditions."

LOL, ok brat. Spend some time in a concentration camp, then tell us how hard you've got it.
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logicanada
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02:22 PM on 05/20/2012
Tell me. How much time have you spent in a C-camp.
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