Vancouver Sun

100- DAY STRIKE: STUDENTS RALLY IN MONTREAL

Students stage one of the biggest rallies in lengthy boycott

- BY MYLES DOLPHIN

MONTREAL — A river of red- clad protesters rippled through downtown Montreal to mark the 100th day of Quebec’s student boycotts, while smaller events were held in other cities Tuesday.

Tens of thousands of people clogged Montreal’s city core in a festive, multiheade­d march designed to mock a new provincial law that demands protest routes be approved in advance. Even a famous provincial politician, Independen­t MNA Pierre Curzi, joined the crowds that strayed off the announced path in a mass demonstrat­ion of defiance against the law. A prominent student organizer wandering in the throng went further, practicall­y daring authoritie­s to punish him.

Organizers said the crowd size rivalled the largest of the protests held the two previous months, on the 22nd of March and April.

While polls in recent weeks suggested the striking students had lost considerab­le public support, they appeared to have been galvanized in recent days by the new Quebec law.

Parallel events were being organized Tuesday in New York, Vancouver, Calgary and Toronto. In France, a few hundred people congregate­d near Paris’ famous Notre Dame Cathedral.

A stone’s throw from the Seine River, people waved flags in a crowd that included many Quebecers, some of whom had brought their own signs, including one that read: “Quebec is becoming a dictatorsh­ip.”

There were two demonstrat­ions scheduled in New York — one at Rockefelle­r Plaza where Quebec government offices are located, and another at Washington Park later in the day.

Organized by the Occupy Wall Street movement and by the group Strike Everywhere, the first New York event was designed to raise awareness about the Quebec protests while the second was about opposing anti- protest laws all over the world. Between 20 and 40 people gathered in front of Quebec’s government office in New York. A few handed out red squares, the symbol of the student protest movement.

The events came several days after the Quebec law set conditions on protests, with stiff financial penalties for transgress­ors — a move that appears to have fanned the flames of the Quebec student movement.

“An increase in the powers of police and the state anywhere is an attack on us everywhere,” said the release for the New York event.

Within Canada, organizers of the Calgary gathering described Quebec’s law as draconian, and encouraged people to meet in support of Quebec students.

There are other hints the student unrest could spread outside the province. The Canadian Federation of Students wants to call an Ontario- wide strike vote this fall in a show of solidarity with Quebec students.

“A campaign of mass educationa­ls, solidarity delegation­s and mass mobilizati­ons should be used to lead up towards a student strike in Ontario,” the federation said in a recent letter.

Meanwhile, in Montreal, tens of thousands of people of all ages were marching, while wearing the iconic red square. The crowd ranged from hardcore elements carrying posters with revolution­ary slogans, to elderly marchers, students’ parents, and groups of people bused in from the Ottawa area.

While less than one- third of Quebec’s post- secondary students are actually on strike, they have attracted some support from people angry at the provincial government.

The new law requires organizers to give police eight hours’ notice about when and where a protest will happen, and sets fines for offenders.

There was some debate in the crowd Tuesday over whether to stick to the pre- approved route supplied to police, or whether to wander off in defiance of the controvers­ial law.

Under encouragem­ent from the more hard- line C. L. A. S. S. E. student group, a minority of protesters broke off from the main crowd in a symbolic slap at Bill 78. Then the crowd continued to disintegra­te into additional factions.

Gabriel Nadeau- Dubois, co- spokesman for the group, called the demonstrat­ion a historic act of widespread civil disobedien­ce. He said he was prepared to suffer the consequenc­es.

“We are ready to act according to our constituti­onal rights and if this has judicial consequenc­es we will assume those consequenc­es,” he said.

“So personally I will be ready to face justice, if I need to.”

Having taken a beating over four days from people accusing it of trampling democratic rights, the Quebec government began a counter- offensive in support of its law Tuesday.

At a news conference, Public Security Minister Robert Dutil read from a list of cities with equally tough, or even tougher, rules for organizing protests. Dutil listed Geneva, Toronto, New York, Los Angeles, France and Spain as jurisdicti­ons that require far more than eight hours’ notice — up to 40 days, in the case of L. A. — in order to hold a protest.

“Other societies with rights and freedoms to protect have found it reasonable to impose certain constraint­s — first of all to protect protesters, and also to protect the public,” Dutil said.

But the Charest government’s critics accused it of badly mismanagin­g the crisis.

One opposition party suggested a solution to the impasse: an election.

The Coalition for Quebec’s Future said the government, following a series of corruption scandals, had lost the moral authority to lead. It suggested Premier Jean Charest should promise to call an election in September to help ease the tension immediatel­y.

For its part, the Parti Quebecois urged Charest to head back to the bargaining table with the students. It said the premier had made things worse with his decision to legislate instead of negotiate.

“This law, sadly, didn’t solve anything and won’t solve anything,” Marois said.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ/ CANADIAN PRESS ?? Red squares have become the symbol of the student protest movement.
RYAN REMIORZ/ CANADIAN PRESS Red squares have become the symbol of the student protest movement.

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