Montreal Gazette

MASKS YES, CURFEW NO

Protesters say it doesn't work

- SUSAN SCHWARTZ sschwartz@postmedia.com

Maggie held a brown poster board with four words neatly printed in black marker, one beneath the other: masks, distancing, vaccinatio­ns, curfews.

Beside the first three, there was a check mark; next to curfews was an X.

Maggie was one of dozens who attended a demonstrat­ion Sunday afternoon at Jeanne-mance Park to protest Premier François Legault's imposition of an 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew in Montreal and Laval “until further notice.”

Maggie said she is “very much against curfews” for two main reasons: they disproport­ionately affect people with lower incomes, who tend to live in smaller spaces; and curfews target victims of domestic violence by confining them in a space with their abuser.

Organizers of the protest said on the event's Facebook page that the curfew also disproport­ionately affects sex workers, people experienci­ng homelessne­ss and those who live in small or crowded dwellings.

“The curfew is the repressive measure of a state that uses its police more and more in a futile attempt to address much wider issues,” the group stated on its Facebook page.

One protester with the Riposte socialiste, a Marxist organizati­on, said he believes it is wrong to impose a curfew on people because there is no evidence that a curfew is effective in containing COVID -19.

Scott Weinstein, an intensive-care unit nurse who has treated patients with COVID-19 and has “seen the worst of it,” had a poster that said “En plein air sanitaire; couvre-feu autoritare et anti-science.”

“Since the beginning, I have been very concerned about the spread of COVID-19 and the government's anti-science stance in combating COVID -19,” he said.

The science is clear, Weinstein said: COVID-19 is aerosol-borne, and aerosols disperse when people are outside. The curfew chases people inside, where COVID -19 aerosols are more dangerous, he said.

“We should encourage people to be outside,” he said. “There should be a curfew to get people outside.”

During the 1918 influenza pandemic, Weinstein said, much health care and schooling took place outside.

Imposing a curfew is effectivel­y putting people who have done nothing wrong under house arrest, said John Martin, another demonstrat­or. He equated the imposition of a curfew to a mass house arrest. “And mass house arrest is inherently wrong,” he said. “It's a ridiculous overextens­ion of authority.”

Such actions as mask wearing and social distancing have a positive impact in stopping the spread of the virus, Martin said, but a curfew does not. “The virus doesn't go out just at night.”

Sunday's protest ended before the 8 p.m. curfew, said police spokespers­on Véronique Comtois. There was one arrest and two tickets issued for infraction­s of COVID-19 health regulation­s.

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 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Protesters opposing the Quebec government's 8 p.m. curfew marched in Montreal on Sunday, gathering in Jeanne-mance Park for a demonstrat­ion. Participan­ts referred to the curfew as a repressive and ineffectiv­e measure.
GRAHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS Protesters opposing the Quebec government's 8 p.m. curfew marched in Montreal on Sunday, gathering in Jeanne-mance Park for a demonstrat­ion. Participan­ts referred to the curfew as a repressive and ineffectiv­e measure.

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