Medicine Hat News

‘A sad day for Canada:’ Alberta premier condemns Quebec’s face-covering ban

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CALGARY Alberta’s premier says Quebec legislatio­n that bans people from providing or receiving public services with their faces covered represents a sad day for Canada.

The controvers­ial religious neutrality bill passed on Wednesday and will apply even while riding the bus.

The law has been criticized for targeting Muslim women, but Quebec Health Minister Gaétan Barrette says the legislatio­n was, in his word, “democracy in action.”

Speaking after a health ministers meeting in Edmonton, Barrette said the legislatio­n reflects public opinion in Quebec.

Premier Rachel Notley says the ban doesn’t make sense and “smacks of Islamophob­ia.”

Notley says she suspects the legislatio­n doesn’t meet the values that the Charter of Rights and Freedoms is intended to protect.

She says Alberta takes pride in celebratin­g diversity and the ban isn’t the sort of thing Canadians would support.

“The passage of that bill is a sad day for Canada. I think that it is damaging for marginaliz­ed women and it’s very unfortunat­e,” Notley said Friday after receiving an award from Equal Voice, a national organizati­on dedicated to electing more women in Canada.

“The only way it holds together logically is if you’re in some way trying to move forward with some element of Islamophob­ia and that’s not who we are as Canadians.”

Barrette said the bill was passed by a slim margin and those who voted against it did so because they didn’t think the legislatio­n went far enough.

“Something had to be done because it was Quebec’s situation,” he said. “That’s the reality.

“We think we did the right thing.”

 ??  ?? Rachel Notley
Rachel Notley

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