National Post

Bloc demands apology for War Measures Act

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OTTAWA • Bloc Québécois Leader Yves- François Blanchet is urging the federal government to apologize for legislatio­n that remains controvers­ial 50 years after its passage during the October Crisis in Quebec.

In October 1970, the Liberal government under then- prime minister Pierre Trudeau suspended civil liberties by invoking the War Measures Act in response to the kidnapping of a Quebec cabinet minister and a British diplomat by members of the militant FLQ separatist group.

The legislatio­n, passed at the request of the Quebec premier and Montreal’s mayor, saw soldiers patrolling the streets as authoritie­s rounded up hundreds of residents under suspicion of involvemen­t in the abductions.

In a motion put forward this week, Blanchet demanded an official apology from the prime minister for his father’s deployment of the army to arrest and detain without charge nearly 500 Quebecers. Blanchet said he has not secured support from any other parties.

He criticized the Conservati­ves for refusing to call for an apology over a law that “attacked the dignity of a whole nation.”

Blanchet also invoked former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader Robert Stanfield, who backed the Liberal government in invoking the War Measures Act but later expressed regret over it.

“You cannot pretend to be deeply in love with Quebec without respecting the desire of Quebecers to receive some apologies from Her Majesty’s government,” Blanchet told reporters Wednesday.

Opposition House leader Gérard Deltell confirmed the Conservati­ves plan to vote against the motion on Thursday.

“For us the October Crisis is first and foremost the death of the deputy premier of Quebec, Pierre Laporte, a guy who had been elected by the people of Quebec who had been killed by terrorists,” Deltell said on his way into the Conservati­ve caucus meeting.

The October Crisis, which culminated in the discovery of Laporte’s body in the trunk of a car, marked the first time the War Measures Act had been invoked in peacetime.

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