Edmonton Journal

Charest to students: keep protests calm

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MONTREAL – Premier Jean Charest is accusing student groups of “hurting Quebecers” as they take to the streets to protest the recent breakdown in talks with the government.

With Montreal’s Grand Prix weekend less than a week away, Charest expressed concern that student groups would disrupt the internatio­nal event, which brings millions of dollars to the province each year.

He said students, who have spent almost four months striking against a proposed tuition hike, should leave Grand Prix fans alone given the financial importance of the race.

The latest round of talks collapsed Thursday afternoon when Charest’s education minister, Michelle Courchesne, declared the two sides had reached an “impasse.”

Around 10,000 students took to the streets of Montreal that night to decry the government’s decision to give up on negotiatio­ns. A smaller crowd did the same in Quebec City.

“It’s all well and good to protest against Jean Charest, to protest against the government,” Charest said Friday while visiting a suburb west of Montreal. “But they’re in the process of hurting Quebecers and the people from whom they’re seeking support. I think they have to examine their conscience­s when it comes to their acts.

“If they had a message to get across, I think we can conclude it has been received.”

Charest’s warning comes at a critical time for the student groups. One of the most visible, and moderate, leaders stepped down on Friday as his two-year mandate expired.

Leo Bureau-Blouin, who headed an associatio­n of college students known as FECQ, will be replaced by 19-year-old Eliane Laberge. Bureau-Blouin had been praised for his evenhanded leadership amid rising tensions.

A more hardline student associatio­n, the CLASSE, has been busy preparing for what it hopes will be a large demonstrat­ion in Montreal on Saturday. It has also invoked the possibilit­y of using the Grand Prix as a platform for the student cause.

The government claims one of the group’s spokespeop­le, Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, threatened during the latest round of negotiatio­ns to disrupt the event. Nadeau-Dubois has said the group would not prevent people from going to the race.

At the Thursday night demonstrat­ion in Montreal, members of an anti-capitalist group handed out pamphlets calling on demonstrat­ors to make their presence known during Grand Prix weekend.

Charest’s Liberal government passed emergency legislatio­n last month aimed at calming student protests, which have at times turned violent.

Student leaders can face stiff fines under the law for supporting illegal demonstrat­ions, and Charest said Friday it is up to student leaders to establish the parameters of their protests.

“These people have the ultimate responsibi­lity and I expect them to assume it totally,” Charest said.

The emergency law has been used sparingly. Several of its provisions have been criticized by legal experts and humanright­s activists, who say they harm such rights as freedom of associatio­n.

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