Montreal police teargas marchers defying protest laws

Montreal Protest Law

First Posted: 05/20/2012 1:59 am Updated: 05/20/2012 8:34 pm


Thousands of protesters outraged by two laws passed Friday to tamp down civil unrest marched through downtown Montreal on Saturday night, many of them wearing now-illegal masks or hoods.


Authorities declared the protest illegal about a half-hour after it began at 8:30 p.m. ET. Then, a little after 11 p.m., Montreal police ordered protesters to disperse and called in the provincial police force's riot squad.


The night ended with 69 arrests, police said.


Police fired tear gas at demonstrators in at least three areas of the city: near McGill University's campus, at the intersection of St. Laurent Boulevard and Ontario Street, and in a park near the Université du Québec à Montréal.


Montreal police spokesman Ian Lafrenière said a "hard core" of protesters was engaging in illegal acts, including a few who were throwing beer bottles at constables.


Student protesters were joined by others spilling out of bars and clubs.


Some people from both groups built fires from traffic cones and construction materials, cheering as the flames lit up the streets and sent plumes of black smoke billowing into the night sky.


Some protesters also complained of police violence. On St. Denis Street, a line of riot officers charged a gathering of people and started beating a man in his 50s or 60s who was retreating, but not nimbly enough to avoid them. A demonstrator told TV cameras that an officer shoved him with a bicycle, while elsewhere riot-squad units charged at peaceful street rallies.


"I'm drunk! I've been on a patio all evening!" one young, handcuffed woman told police, in an exchange caught on the live broadcast of Concordia University Television (CUTV).


Riot police repeatedly warned protesters they would be incarcerated throughout the weekend unless they dispersed.


Estimates varied widely on the number of people in the streets, with numbers ranging from 3,000 at the beginning of the first march to 20,000 at the demonstrations' peak, when packs of protesters split up to locations around the downtown.


Protest spreads to Saturday Night Live


The protest has spread beyond Canada's borders.


In New York, members of the Montreal-based rock band Arcade Fire wore the movement's iconic red squares during an appearance with The Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger on Saturday Night Live. Jagger wore a red shirt, but no red square.


A day earlier, players in Quebec's film industry were sporting them at the Cannes Film Festival.


Online, the website for the Quebec Liberal Party and the province's Education Ministry were down for most of Saturday in an apparent cyber attack.


While no one claimed responsibility, the hacker group Anonymous has taken an interest. The group wrote on Twitter that Bill 78 "must die" and later issued a video denouncing the law.


Bill 78 lays out strict regulations governing demonstrations of over 50 people, including having to give eight hours' notice for details such as the protest route, the duration and the time at which they're being held.


Fines up to $125,000


The night rally was the 26th in a row in the city, part of a province-wide surge of civil disobedience that began as a denunciation by striking students of the Liberal government's plan to hike tuition fees and has grown to encompass a wide array of social causes.


The most recent cause for complaint is the adoption of emergency legislation to try to end the escalating crisis.


On Friday, the Quebec government passed Bill 78, which comes with heavy financial penalties for violations.


The law:


- Suspends winter semesters at schools where students have boycotted classes.


- Stipulates penalties for groups who try to block access to schools, and even for organizations that don't induce their members not to.


- Requires any public protest of more than 50 people to alert police at least eight hours ahead of time, with the event's start time, route and date. Groups that violate the law face fines of up to $125,000.


The City of Montreal passed its own measures on Friday, making it illegal to wear a mask, scarf or hood during a public protests.


'Draconian' anti-protest measure


Legal experts, civil-rights groups, unions and student groups have blasted the hardline Bill 78. A full-page newspaper 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," FAE president Pierre Saint-Germain said 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 called 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."


Others who spoke out include former Quebec Superior Court judge John Gomery.


Court challenge


The province's two main umbrella student groups, the Fédération étudiante collégiale du Québec and the Fédération étudiante universitaire du Québec, said Saturday they will launch a legal challenge of Bill 78 this week.


Vocal denunciations of the planned tuition increases began in March 2011, but it was only in February that they ramped up into a student strike that at its peak saw 180,000 pupils boycotting college and university classes. Since then, large regular protests have touched Montreal, Quebec City, Gatineau, Trois-Rivières and other towns.


The government wants to raise university fees by more than 70 per cent over the next five years, to $3,800 annually. The province points out that that would still be among the lowest tuition rates in the country. Opposing students say it will render even more of them indebted on graduation and put higher education financially out of reach for more people.


Negotiations have largely been at an impasse. On Monday, Line Beauchamp cited the crisis in resigning from her cabinet post as education minister and from the provincial assembly.


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    Protesters watch a fire during a demonstration in Montreal, Saturday, May 19, 2012. A plan to restore order in Montreal appeared to erupt in smoke late Saturday, with a fiery blockades blazing on busy downtown streets.(AP Photo/Graham Hughes, The Canadian Press)

  • Student Protests

    Protesters start a fire during a demonstration in Montreal, Saturday, May 19, 2012. A plan to restore order in Montreal appeared to erupt in smoke late Saturday, with a fiery blockades blazing on busy downtown streets.(AP Photo/Graham Hughes, The Canadian Press)

  • Student Protests

    Protesters start a fire during a demonstration in Montreal, Saturday, May 19, 2012. A plan to restore order in Montreal appeared to erupt in smoke late Saturday, with a fiery blockades blazing on busy downtown streets.(AP Photo/Graham Hughes, The Canadian Press)



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Thousands of protesters outraged by two laws passed Friday to tamp down civil unrest marched through downtown Montreal on Saturday night, many of them wearing now-illegal masks or hoods. ...
Thousands of protesters outraged by two laws passed Friday to tamp down civil unrest marched through downtown Montreal on Saturday night, many of them wearing now-illegal masks or hoods. ...
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Wonder Land
...Words Matter
02:31 PM on 05/21/2012
To all those mal-contents out there who are taking such comfort in maligning and denigrating the
the police. To all those hysterics who crowd the streets night after night to impede the work of our peace officers. To all those whining students and wimpering parents ( who represent no more than a small percentage of the overall student population of Quebec ). To all those politicians who are providing moral support for civil disobediance. (P.Q. and Q.S.)
We, the citizens of Montreal, will not forget.
07:55 AM on 05/21/2012
Enough is enough (as Donna Summer once said).... 1) Arrest the entire lot & fine either them or their parents then book the student with a permanent criminal record.
Half of these students will instantly contact Mommy & Daddy via their Iphones &/or Ipads that have monthly fees that easily surpass their overdue tuition fee increase yet they & their parents appear to value an Iphone / Ipad more than a proper education.

Book them with criminal activity and then fail them for this year.

As a citizen of Montreal I have more than had enough with this ridiculous excuse to protest.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bbertaud
Je ne regrette rien, rien de rien
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:59 PM on 05/20/2012
More power to the Québec students. I've said this before...

They may lose this battle, but they will end up winning the war.
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lilkitten22
Be the change that you wish to see in the world
03:25 PM on 05/20/2012
I don't see this going away anytime soon, looks like it's just getting worse, and these laws that Quebec's premier are putting forward are not going to make them any happier.
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Another Pesky Canadian
Talk - action = 0
02:30 PM on 05/20/2012
An exercise in logic:

Given only one angle of a triangle; there are an infinite number of possible combinations of the 2 remaining angles needed to complete the triangle.

Given any two angles of a triangle; the remaining angle can be calculated.

Something to consider: when trying to more fully understand an issue; it can be of great value to try to take more than a single viewpoint into account.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stopgeorge
Paper Ballots WORK. Unverifiable e-voting doesn't
02:14 PM on 05/20/2012
That scarf & mask law is unconstitutional. Not sure how the Quebec legal circuit will handle it, since they are not part of the constitution.
02:09 PM on 05/20/2012
1) I see a lot of commenters saying that although in Quebec we would still have the lowest tuition at 3,800$, well it's still unfair because in Quebec we pay high taxes. Here's what I say to all of you:

If you're complaining that those amounts of money are significant, then you are probably not paying any taxes. Or at least you are not at the province's top tax rate.

I'd be curious to see how many ppl whose income is at the top tax rate are in those protests. I'd bet none! Because they have to get up the next morning to go to work, and pay their 48% of taxes to ensure that ppl like those protesters get access to education at a low price, that mothers get paid maternity leave, that families get 7$ a day care, that everyone gets free healthcare, that teachers and civil servants (including opposition party government) get decent pay and benefits, and that we have an army to protect us and fight for peace, and so on...

So before you claim that all this money we pay in taxes gets lost in a corrupt governement, please have a serious look around you at all the services that you are entitled to by living in this province, then do a little maths. You'll soon understand.
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All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
02:37 PM on 05/20/2012
"well it's still unfair because in Quebec we pay high taxes. Here's what I say to all of you"

Demands endless social services, complains about taxes. How greek of you.
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All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
02:58 PM on 05/20/2012
*of them, sorry.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Imma Okay
11:35 PM on 05/20/2012
He's not complaining, he's just saying $3800 a year is too much for what they pay in taxes.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cael
01:57 PM on 05/20/2012
Hey, stupid people there in Montreal, that is why those laws were put in place. You have no one to blame but yourself.

Man the world seems to get dumber and dumber daily.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
01:44 PM on 05/20/2012
There are still some fine employment opportunities available to those with a criminal record.
01:17 PM on 05/20/2012
Montreal Rising!
https://vimeo.com/41387746
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
01:53 PM on 05/20/2012
Child kings up past their bedtime!
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jeremyemilio
My micro-bio is NOT empty
01:16 PM on 05/20/2012
Wait. So if I have this right they're angry because:

a. They are being denied the freedom of movement to go where they please, and

b. They are being denied the right to go to class.

Wow. When they're finished here, maybe they should mount a protest against irony.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charles the Great
Canadian/Israeli Goy in Alert,Nunavut
12:52 PM on 05/20/2012
I think the Quebec government should make them pay every Penney of the cost of what they have done since the 99% of students are being controlled by these 1% idiots saying they are the 99%
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
01:46 PM on 05/20/2012
It's simple, revoke all education subsidies for a couple years to pay for damages.
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Thalin Lea
12:32 PM on 05/20/2012
I do hope they can get to an agreement before a fatality occur, like most of the time these kind of protest ends up in fatalities before an agreement is reached.where is our superiority as human beings. Apparently millions of years of human evolution have not been enough...
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Ansdlmol
01:06 PM on 05/20/2012
Correct. The protestors have not evolved. They are still neanderthal barbarians.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thalin Lea
05:17 PM on 05/20/2012
And i guess the choose chimpanzees as Police
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
01:47 PM on 05/20/2012
The government shouldn't be negotiating out of fear of violence and terrorism from a distinct minority.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thalin Lea
08:02 PM on 05/20/2012
The Trash Heap has spoken!
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Another Pesky Canadian
Talk - action = 0
12:27 PM on 05/20/2012
An exercise in logic:

- Party A offends Party B. Party B, in return, offends Party A.

Q: who is wrong?
05:15 PM on 05/20/2012
I'd say, from the given information, that Party B is more wrong. Party A is not correct in offending Party B, but Party B has no obligation to escalate the scenario. That is a choice they made out of many possible different choices - some of which would not result in escalation. The entire scenario is just people being childish and petty.