Times Colonist

McGill camp should be dismantled, Quebec premier says

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MONTREAL — Quebec Premier François Legault called on Thursday for the end to the pro-Palestinia­n protest encampment on the lower field of McGill University’s downtown campus in Montreal, saying he expected police to dismantle the tents.

His comments followed calls by McGill this week for police to remove the dozens of tents that have been pitched on the field since Saturday in protest of the war in Gaza.

“The encampment is illegal,” Legault told reporters in Quebec City.

“The law must be respected, so I expect the police to dismantle these illegal campsites, which is what McGill has requested.”

McGill’s encampment is one of several across the country, including at the University of Ottawa and the University of British Columbia.

On Thursday morning, tents, banners and flags cropped up at the centre of the University of Toronto’s downtown campus. Activists at all the sites are calling for their universiti­es to cut ties with Israel.

Questioned about whether Legault’s comment were appropriat­e, the federal justice minister suggested politician­s shouldn’t be telling police what to do.

“The operationa­l decisions of the police are always theirs independen­tly of politician­s,” Arif Virani told reporters in Ottawa.

“This is always the case in a democracy like ours. It sets us apart from other countries where the rule of law is not respected, so it’s extremely important.”

Montreal police spokesman Jean-Pierre Brabant said Thursday the force was “still evaluating” the situation at McGill.

So far, he said, the encampment has been peaceful and it’s not in the interests of the police or the city to immediatel­y intervene.

At the protest site last Friday, pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinia­n supporters held duelling demonstrat­ions on either side of the fence at the main entrance to McGill, with dozens of police officers forming a line to ensure the two sides stayed apart.

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