Quebec Student Protests: 300 Arrested In Montreal Night Of Protest, Movement Gains International Exposure

CP  |  Posted: Updated: 05/22/2012 12:35 am

MONTREAL - Quebec's student protests took a dark, angry turn over the weekend following the introduction of an emergency law aimed at restoring order in the province, while the movement gained a number of high-profile supporters on the international stage.

For the second night in a row, police clashed with protesters repeatedly into the late hours Sunday in a chaotic scene that left at least 300 arrested and 20 injured, including 11 police officers. At least one person was taken to hospital with what emergency services called "non-life threatening injuries."

Windows were smashed, construction cones and signs tossed into the streets, and there were reports a fire hydrant was burst open at the same spot where a bonfire was lit a night earlier.

Riot police used tear gas and sound grenades to try to break up the protest, which was deemed illegal moments after it began for not complying with the new law. The result was a series of violent exchanges between small groups of protesters and police in pockets throughout the downtown core.

One video circulated online captured what appeared to be a police cruiser moving forward briefly with a protester on the hood, before the protester jumped off to the side and the cruiser sped away. Police later denied a rumour that a person had been run over.

Two journalists from local newspapers also reported being arrested and later released.

The legislation passed Friday was intended to put an end to three months of student protests, but it appears only to have given the movement momentum.

"I think the government put the police in a difficult situation," said protester Nino Gabrielli, who got his Master's last fall at a Montreal university. "I think the population is mobilizing around this thing."

As the scenes of unrest played out in the city the movement also gained some celebrity support.

Montreal's Arcade Fire wore the movement's iconic red squares during an appearance with Mick Jagger on Saturday Night Live. Activist and filmmaker Michael Moore also gave his support to the students, featuring links about the issue prominently on his website.

"Their uprising is inspiring," he tweeted to over a million followers. "One of the most amazing mass protests of the year."

The global hacker collective Anonymous took an interest as well, releasing two videos denouncing the legislation and the planned tuition increases. The group, which regularly hacks into government websites around the world, warned of future actions in Quebec.

"Resistance is futile," a computer-modulated voice stated in one video. "The hour of war has come."

The website for the Quebec Liberal party and the province's Education Ministry were down for portions of the weekend in an apparent cyber attack. Anonymous, however, did not claim responsibility.

The newfound support came during a weekend marked by violence and vandalism. The unrest reached a climax with a blaze of plastic traffic cones and construction materials lit Saturday during a melee on a busy downtown street.

Meanwhile, police came under criticism on Sunday over an altercation caught on video that shows patrons on a bar patio getting pepper sprayed.

Surveillance footage, played in a loop on one of Quebec's all-news stations, shows several people sprayed by riot police at close range. Customers are seen scrambling to get inside the bar as a police officer knocks over tables and chairs.

Another video from a local TV station shows the officers took action after one was hit by a flying chair. The chair was then flung back toward the patio. The bar owner said police went too far and he's considering taking legal action.

"People were falling on each other running inside to get away from the pepper spray, breaking things, and then people left by the back exit," said Martin Guimond, who runs the Saint Bock brasserie in the city's lively Latin Quarter. His waitress was initially going to call 911 after it happened.

"And then she said, 'But wait, it's the police that are doing this,'" Guimond recalled. "That's when you realize there's a total loss of security."

Police didn't return a request Sunday for comment about the incident, which occurred only steps from where the fires were set.

Police were newly armed on the weekend with Bill 78, which lays out regulations governing demonstrations of over 50 people. It includes requiring organizers to give eight hours' notice for details such as the protest route, the duration and the time at which they're being held.

The City of Montreal also adopted a new bylaw that threatens protesters who wear masks with heavy fines. But it failed to deter dozens of protesters from wearing masks Saturday or Sunday night, and police said they would use the new law with discretion.

Montreal police took a tougher stance on the weekend than previously seen during the nightly marches. The march was almost immediately declared illegal on both Saturday and Sunday because, police said, they weren't provided with a protest route and bottles and rocks were thrown at police.

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MONTREAL - Quebec's student protests took a dark, angry turn over the weekend following the introduction of an emergency law aimed at restoring order in the province, while the movement gained a numbe...
MONTREAL - Quebec's student protests took a dark, angry turn over the weekend following the introduction of an emergency law aimed at restoring order in the province, while the movement gained a numbe...
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1846
Deir Yassin Survivor
04:52 AM on 05/22/2012
So many people with such confused ideas all think this it their issue.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
11:17 PM on 05/21/2012
In regards to Arcade Fire. I believe music is too expensive and should be free. TO BITTORRENT!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Whistlejackett
Hey stop doing that
10:45 PM on 05/21/2012
Well what do you expect from a dinosaur like Charest? He is too old to compete in this fast paced world. His brain is stuck in the past, he should step down just after he passes a law that any Provincial MP and it's Leader should be under the age of 47.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
10:52 PM on 05/21/2012
" he should step down just after he passes a law that any Provincial MP and it's Leader should be under the age of 47."

This would be that democracy thing that these guys are protesting for, eh.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Whistlejackett
Hey stop doing that
10:59 PM on 05/21/2012
Then let Charest re-educate himself and stop assuming his views and education are suffice to rule his people. Something has to give, may as well be him
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Another Pesky Canadian
Talk - action = 0
10:12 PM on 05/21/2012
Mmmmmmmm. Troll stew again tonight...somebody must be getting sensitive.
11:00 PM on 05/21/2012
Libtrolls stewing in their own juices...mmmm...tastes like desperation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thalin Lea
11:18 PM on 05/21/2012
totally agree A.P.C. honey, all i can see is the same troll after every user comments. Sometimes these kind of species are looking for attention ...
10:07 PM on 05/21/2012
I would like to thank "ALL seeing guy" for supporting the protesters in spirit and I quote him:

"forcefully if necessary for the greater good"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
10:53 PM on 05/21/2012
Viva la child king libre!
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1846
Deir Yassin Survivor
06:08 PM on 05/21/2012
The sooner this madness ends the sooner a solution can be agreed to.
Unfortunately there are no leaders capable of negotiation and compromise left it has degraded into an ongoing riot.
People advocating lawlessness during the course of this unrest should be jailed.
07:31 PM on 05/21/2012
when a law is unjust, it is every citizen's duty to disobey it.
dictators also rule by passing laws and jailing people who disobey them. your authoritarian bent throughout this discussion is somewhat disconcerting.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mravka
The world has gone completely mad.
07:35 PM on 05/21/2012
This thread is chock-full of these myopic authoritarian types.
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1846
Deir Yassin Survivor
07:50 PM on 05/21/2012
Unjust?
Tell that to the students who want to go to class and cannot because a minority of radicals prevent it. Try thinking about everyone, this is not a national protest on civil liberty, I suggest that students unhappy with the current state of affairs get their education elsewhere, my taxes are high enough already.
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Ian Llangan
Your Invisible Sky Friend Is Morally Abhorrent
05:54 PM on 05/21/2012
Montreal's annual (and always-shaky) grasp on the Canadian stop of the F1 racing circuit is coming up June 9th-12th. If this rioting is not brought under control, massive numbers of reservations are going to be cancelled, resulting in financial losses to wage earners in the transportation, hospitality and tourism sectors. It seems to me that many students rely on such jobs to earn tuition monies. Can someone please explain to them that they are effectively shooting themselves in the foot over future tuition hikes that they are unlikely to have to pay? (Ditto across the rest of Quebec's summer tourism industry...)
06:23 PM on 05/21/2012
because this is a greater cause that involves some self-sacrifice...
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All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
08:30 PM on 05/21/2012
"some self-sacrifice"

Just as long as "sacrifice" isn't a modest tuition increase.
Wonder Land
...Words Matter
11:15 PM on 05/21/2012
BS, GeorgesK, BS.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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06:39 PM on 05/21/2012
many of us will be very happy if the F! does not happen this year or ever again.it is nothing but arrogant ,noisyand obnoxious extravagance.
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Ian Llangan
Your Invisible Sky Friend Is Morally Abhorrent
10:46 PM on 05/21/2012
I hope you will enjoy explaining your outlook to the thousands of hotel cleaning and reception staff, restaurant staff, cab drivers, etc., etc., as they wonder where their tip (and tuition money went).
04:21 PM on 05/21/2012
The Quebec electorate said:
Survey on the student crisis by Crop/La Presse in Quebec.
66% support the special law.
67% believe that the police should be Harsher with the demonstrators.
65% of Quebecers find the attitude of the students unjustified.

How do you evaluate the behavior of police?
81% say good

How should professors behave?
-58% neutral
-32% should teach those students who want to follow their courses.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Skookum1
truth can't be bought, but lies sure can be sold..
11:02 PM on 05/21/2012
False data - the sample was chosen by a Quebecor news/p.r. firm not at the ballot box. That's where the electorate speaks; anything else is just a random sample.
07:04 AM on 05/22/2012
Skiikun1
Why don't you read first and then make you comment. The data was from Crop/La Presse survey not Quebecor, Dummy.
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arkymorgan
Nobody knows the trouble I've been...
04:12 PM on 05/21/2012
Just as a data point: whenever I hear someone complain about the phone thing, I immediately read it as code for ''I'm not young anymore, and these young people constantly remind me of that, so I hate them, on principle.''
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mravka
The world has gone completely mad.
07:28 PM on 05/21/2012
HAHAHAHAHA!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
10:59 PM on 05/21/2012
Steve Jobs says hi.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
arkymorgan
Nobody knows the trouble I've been...
11:06 PM on 05/21/2012
That's a bit witless, as comments go.
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TonyOnly
Truth matters.
04:05 PM on 05/21/2012
Latest Crop/La Presse poll in Quebec on the student protests: .

66% of Quebecers support special law Bill-78.
65% of Quebecers believe the student protests are unjustified.
67% of Quebecers believe the police should use more force, if necessary to stop the protests.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Overt Enigma
YOUR micro bio is empty
04:20 PM on 05/21/2012
65%-67% of Quebecers are wrong and have no idea about concepts of social justice.
04:27 PM on 05/21/2012
Quebecers live in a society where there’re is more Social Justice than the sum of all of the rest of Canada put together.
It is a Quebecers (Pierre E Trudeau) who brought to Canada the Charter of Rights and Freedom to the rest of Canada.
Go back to school and learn you history.
05:19 PM on 05/21/2012
doesn`t majority rules mean anything to you
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Skookum1
truth can't be bought, but lies sure can be sold..
04:22 PM on 05/21/2012
Translation: 2/3 of Quebeckers are brainwashed by the media into giving answers as trained to.
05:01 PM on 05/21/2012
Wow, what an arrogant comment!
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Another Pesky Canadian
Talk - action = 0
10:10 PM on 05/21/2012
Re: "...brainwashed by the media into giving answers as trained to."

Or perhaps just another number tossed out by a corrupt source to support a right-wing-authorized storyline hoping the masses will buy into it.

Control the media, control the message, control the masses.
FromarealCanadian
grumpy old self proclaimed backwoods intellectual
03:14 PM on 05/21/2012
Conundrum - as long as I can remember, say about 50 years, successive Canadian Governments (greedy academics are in on this too) have bleated about the beneifits of higher education and have done nothing to make it more accessible to Canadian Citizens (but have nicely lined their own pockets).

Instead all I have heard is we must bring in "skilled"immigrants. Most countries support their own citizens - not here we support everyone else first. Perhaps if we stopped regarding citizens as ATM's for governments things might change.

The policies should be Canadians first and immigrants second. We need immigrants but how many PHD's do you require driving taxis or VIP Business Immigrants in fake corporations? - this is where the genius's in government are taking us. Lets upgrade our own citizens with education and opportunity and bring in immigrants to fill the spaces left (and there are many). We need workers from abroad to go to jobs outside of our large cities and not a new ruling class buying up expensive real estate in major cities to join the politicians.

Back to the students - I strongly disagree with violence but iron fisted governments have never done anything but start civil unrest. Read a little history. The problem is our national policy as it is and adopted by provinces. At least the Quebec students have the fortitude to standup for what they believe in.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:29 PM on 05/21/2012
See, when it started I had a lots of sympathy, but I honestly did not know they pay 90% less then in Ontario, that is not fair.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mravka
The world has gone completely mad.
03:36 PM on 05/21/2012
They don't pay 90% less, that's a fabrication.
07:58 PM on 05/21/2012
I am a Concordia student and am an Ontario resident. I pay the same tuition as my girlfriend who is at U Ottawa.
Wonder Land
...Words Matter
03:43 PM on 05/21/2012
"iron fisted governments" ? In Quebec ? You are joking, right ?
The LAST thing needed in this discussion is more hyperbole of the sort you use in your comments.
Pardon me for asking, but do you actually know the content of Bill 78 ? Just saying....
06:36 PM on 05/21/2012
it makes demonstrations subject to arbitrary police approval. that's pretty authoritarian, and very similar to a law proposed by Putin earlier this month (not kidding, look it up).

the 'iron fisted' comment may be strong - scratch that - may be ludicrous if you compare to, say, North Korea, but relative to the rest of Canada, the Montreal Police Service is the most repressive in the country (it's the only one, to my knowledge, that's been criticized by the UN for use of arbitrary detention and excessive force). and they've gotten pretty violent on several occasions over the past few months while the government congratulated them. in this particular political battle, they are Charest's attack dogs.
FromarealCanadian
grumpy old self proclaimed backwoods intellectual
12:45 AM on 05/22/2012
If governments practised what they preached - this includes all federal and provincial governments of Canada - we wouldn't even be having this conversation. The government of Quebec is and always has been completely paternalistic and authoritarian. Oh and yes I am aware of Bill 78's contents and I am also aware of past history when governments pass this type of legislation. This isn't the first time nor will it be the last - try reading about labour riots in Winnipeg and other Canadian cities - draw the parallels.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:05 PM on 05/21/2012
I wish some of Ontario graduates would come on line and tell you all, how hard it is to get a job here in the "richest province"- something that does not apply any more.
Economy and Political sci., Science chemistry, biology, most of them have Temporary jobs or grant money jobs.
I wonder, what is the situation in Quebec?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elatas
50% French and 50% Italian mix
05:13 PM on 05/21/2012
Exactly the same. No jobs for graduates in these fields.
05:22 PM on 05/21/2012
so get a job in another field. news flash - you don`t always get what you want in life, especially right away. it takes time. And for some people, they never get it. That`s not the government`s fault, that`s life. But sometimes, with maturity, you figure out a way to get the most out of life regardless of what you do to earn a living. Life can be very rich without you getting rich.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
02:27 PM on 05/21/2012
"Windows were smashed, construction cones and signs tossed into the streets, and there were reports a fire hydrant was burst open at the same spot where a bonfire was lit a night earlier."

Keeping is classy eh. How dare the government take Macbooks out of the hands of these brilliant students with tuition hikes!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mravka
The world has gone completely mad.
02:52 PM on 05/21/2012
You should follow your own advice about keeping it classy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
03:12 PM on 05/21/2012
Oh sorry. How dare the government take Macbooks AND iPads out of the hands of these brilliant, gifted students.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mravka
The world has gone completely mad.
02:20 PM on 05/21/2012
The students are absolutely in the right here. Who wants to be saddled with a lifetime of debt just to get an education? Just because the students in other provinces pay more doesn't mean that Quebecers are spoiled, it means that Canadians are being duped.

Quebec, and the same goes for the rest of Canada, is definitely rich enough to be able to fund post-secondary education for all citizens, it's a question of priorities. As in the rest of world, a common scenario is being played out; major Quebec corporations pay little or no taxes and often receive massive taxpayer subsidies besides, but for the rest of us it's austerity and a tightening of the belts. For many, that's a bitter pill to swallow.

Furthermore, Quebec is the highest taxed jurisdiction in the Americas but the funds somehow always disappear through kickbacks into the hands of the mafia, dodgy bureaucrats and politicians. Everyone in Quebec knows this, hence the outrage.

It's also hard for people (young students especially) to be given moral lessons in fiscal responsibility when those who benefit the most financially in our society are so reckless with money entrusted to them; 150 billions for supposedly solid Canadian banks, dust for the rest of us. $40 billions lost by the Caisse de Depot du Quebec in dodgy investments directly encouraged by Charest's government.

So before spouting off on how Quebecers are spoiled, look at the greater picture here and ask yourself why you're not on our side.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
02:28 PM on 05/21/2012
"The students are absolutely in the right here. Who wants to be saddled with a lifetime of debt just to get an education?"

Feel free to post some numbers to support this "lifetime of debt".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mravka
The world has gone completely mad.
02:40 PM on 05/21/2012
A simple search will turn up the numbers you require in about 2.5 seconds.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/personal-finance/staggering-debt-lessons-for-young-and-old/article2109256/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elatas
50% French and 50% Italian mix
05:21 PM on 05/21/2012
People make the mistake of only looking at tuition fees but there are living expenses. My daughter finished school with a $11k debt and a Bachelor degree in Biology. She couldn't find a job and went back to school last September. She increased her credit margin to $22K because she only gets a $1,000 student loan. No bursaries. My son had a part time job when he started College but he was flunking his courses so he quit his job to study full-time. He just finished his degree with a $30K debt.
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onethot
D.I.P.
02:35 PM on 05/21/2012
I have no objection to students protesting re: tuition costs in so far as the protest does not entail smoke bombs in the metro, smashing objects, setting things on fire, blocking traffic, scaring people, etc.
I also do not comprehend why a protest march has people carrying Quebec flags. Is this a political protest or an education fee protest ?

Having lived in Montreal for many years, I have seen how many students ( granted not all) spend a great deal of time in bars or partying, eating out frequently, in short, spending money way beyond their means. If an individual wants an education then that should be #1 priority.
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RobLuzecky
02:42 PM on 05/21/2012
your comment is bereft of logic.
Wonder Land
...Words Matter
02:14 PM on 05/21/2012
When groups like "Anonymous" attack my government, they attack me.
02:32 PM on 05/21/2012
Wow.
You really ARE a boot liker, arn't you?
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All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
02:40 PM on 05/21/2012
How dare the people democratically elect a government. We should just appoint some wise students to run things from here on in.
06:41 PM on 05/21/2012
when groups like "the government" attack my fellow citizens with batons and pepper spray and limits on civil liberties, they attack me.

it's a same you are blindly adhering to your government instead of your fellow humans.
Wonder Land
...Words Matter
11:38 PM on 05/21/2012
GeorgesK is your name. I see plagiarism is your game.