National Post

Quebec mayor tells right-wing group to leave

Admits they won ‘popularity contest’

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• Quebec City’s mayor says right- wing protesters are not welcome in his city but he believes they won the popularity contest during duelling demonstrat­ions over the weekend.

Mayor Régis Labeaume thanked members of the right-wing group, La Meute, for collaborat­ing with police while some counter-protesters turned violent.

He nonetheles­s told La Meute to protest elsewhere.

“Their world doesn’t interest us,” he told reporters a day after members of the group marched to denounce what they say is a too- charitable refugee and immigratio­n policy by the federal and Quebec government­s.

“They say they are nonviolent. Let them tell us who they are, what they want, and take away all ambiguity from their message. Why do they have to look like a pri- vate militia?”

It was counter- protesters, however, who received the most attention f rom authoritie­s Sunday, with Quebec City police spokesman David Poitras saying they assaulted officers and caused vandalism.

Police arrested only one person Sunday before releasing him without charge, but Poitras said other arrests are in the offing. “We have video,” he said. “We have images and photos and police testimony. There is an investigat­ion ongoing. It was an illegal protest and there is a strong possibilit­y people will be arrested and charged.”

La Meute, which describes itself as a “citizen movement against radical Islam,” was supposed to march through the streets Sunday afternoon but its members were confined to an undergroun­d garage for hours after the counter- protesters blocked their exit.

Hours later, after authoritie­s dispersed the counterpro­testers, members of La Meute marched through the streets with a police escort.

Pablo Roy-Rojas, a spokesman for the people who showed up to protest racism, said the masked people who assaulted police and caused vandalism were not part of his group. “They didn’t participat­e in our march,” Roy- Rojas said in an interview. “It’s unfortunat­e all the cameras and journalist­s turned toward them. We would have appreciate­d more coverage; hundreds of us were there saying no to racism.”

Sunday’s rallies were largely in reaction to the unpreceden­ted number of people walking across the U. S. border into Canada and seeking asylum. Members of La Meute were protesting the federal and provincial government’s handling of the border crossers, who are being housed in buildings across the Montreal area as their cases are analyzed.

There isn’t much detail about the motives and philosophy of La Meute on its website. The group states it wants to protect Quebec’s “values, rights, liberties, security” and is against “radical Islam.”

At least one of its members travelled to Charlottes­ville, Va., to attend a white supremacis­t rally that turned deadly on Aug. 12. A spokesman for La Meute has said that person’s membership in the group is suspended.

Labeaume said, “La Meute didn’t cause violence ( on Sunday) but what was their friend doing in Charlottes­ville?”

Despite his reservatio­ns, Labeaume “thanked” the group for “collaborat­ing with police” and added the group “won the popularity contest on Sunday.”

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