Protesting student leaders say Liberals, CAQ disregard youth
6th monthly student protest calls for political awareness
CBC News
Posted: Aug 22, 2012 10:29 AM ET
Last Updated: Aug 22, 2012 8:21 PM ET
Students are seen leaving Montreal's Place du Canada during the sixth monthly student protest. (CBC/Thomas Daigle)
It's estimated more than 10,000 people gathered at Montreal's Place du Canada — as they have been doing on the 22nd of every month since March — to protest the government's planned tuition increase on Wednesday afternoon and to denounce Law 12, formerly known as Bill 78.
Éliane Laberge, president of the Quebec federation of college students (FECQ), and Martine Desjardins, president of the Quebec federation of university students (FEUQ), led the protest.
Protesters walked through the city's downtown core, as they have been doing since the student strike movement began in February of last year.
The protest ended peacefully at Place Jacques-Cartier in Old Montreal, where thousands regrouped to listen to speeches and music and wave election-related signs.
Students demonstrate outside Collège Bois-de-Boulogne. (Morgan Dunlop/CBC)During a news conference before the protest, Laberge said: "In 14 days, every Quebecer will have to assess Quebec's Liberal Party. They will have to assess nine years. Nine years where we saw corruption increase. Nine years where we saw public services fees increase in every domain."
Desjardins added that students were also putting pressure on people to vote, saying that the Coalition Avenir Québec, like the Liberal Party, was making unilateral promises and disregarding the student population.
Both student leaders urged Quebec citizens to be critical of political parties running in the provincial election. They also added that they would revise their platforms and strengthen student mobilization if the Liberal Party kept its top seat in Quebec's National Assembly.
Véronique Laplante, spokeswoman for the more militant student association CLASSE, said citizens need more debate with politicians and tougher questions need to asked of them.
She added that the student organization will not recommend which party students should support in the election, but said students should make an educated decision.
"Democratic movements need to have discussions with their [candidates]. The message we can send is that we should ask people what they think and what they plan on doing."
Laplante said despite the ongoing student protests, the political parties are not suffciently responding to students' demands.
Jeanne Reynolds, another spokeswoman for CLASSE, said even if the elected government decides to freeze tuition fees, her organization would continue to protest to seek free tuition.
CEGEP closes to protect 'personal safety'
Earlier Wednesday, facing students protesting outside as part of the province-wide demonstrations on the 22nd of the month, a Montreal CEGEP cancelled classes, reversing an earlier decision not to suspend teaching.
Collège Bois-de-Boulogne, a CEGEP in the Ahuntsic borough, said in a statement on its website that it was taking the step to "avoid any situation that might compromise personal safety."
The day's regular classes will be held Saturday, Sept. 15, instead. Continuing education courses scheduled for before 5 p.m. were also been cancelled, while those starting after 5 o'clock went ahead.
Several dozen students were picketing Wednesday morning outside the north-end school. They unfurled a banner and stood on a set of entraceway steps, but there were no reports of confrontations.
The CEGEP's students had voted last Thursday to end their five-month-long strike, but with a one-day exception for Wednesday to join the day of student-movement protests across the province. Bois-de-Boulogne's administration, however, initally refused to cancel classes and as a result was targeted by picketers.
Quebec's contentious Law 12 makes it an offence to organize or partake in a protest "that could result in" a student being blocked from a classroom, where the demonstration is in or within 50 metres of a school building. It is also an offence to "contribute to slowing down, degrading or delaying" university or college classes.
But Montreal police have said they won't enforce those provisions unless school authorities ask them to.
About 43,000 post-secondary students are still taking part in a general strike in Quebec, down from a peak of 150,000 in the spring, but not at any CEGEPs, which have all voted to go back to class.
The 22nd of each month is a symbolic day for student demonstrators, however, and 10 CEGEP student unions representing nearly 50,000 pupils opted for a one-day strike to take part in Wednesday's rallies.
Share Tools
Latest Montreal News Headlines
- STM drivers' union calls again for stiffer penalties to prevent assaults
- Montreal bus drivers showed up for a scheduled court appearance of one of three people accused of beating up STM driver Marc-Olivier Fortin, to call for more protection for transit workers. more »
- Pierre's picks: 5 don't-miss events in Montreal this weekend
- Every Friday, CBC Montreal's Homerun arts reporter Pierre Landry brings you the top five things to see and do in Montreal this weekend. more »
- 2 earthquakes felt in Ontario and Quebec
- Two earthquakes near the Ontario-Quebec border could be felt across both provinces this morning. more »
- Public Health studying brain cancer cases in Shannon, Que.
- Quebec's Public Health Agency is studying cases of brain cancer in Shannon, Que., after more than a decade of complaints from the community. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Senator Pamela Wallin leaves Conservative caucus
- Senator Pamela Wallin says she is recusing herself from the Conservative caucus while her travel expense claims are under scrutiny. Wallin's departure comes one day after Senator Mike Duffy left the Tory caucus amid controversy over his expense claims.
more »
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford denies crack cocaine allegations
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford says allegations he was caught on tape smoking crack are "ridiculous," following reports that someone had been trying to sell a purported recording of such an event to U.S. and Canadian media outlets. more »
- Sailor fighting cancer says AWOL charges dropped
- All charges against a Nova Scotia woman in the Royal Canadian Navy who is fighting cancer, and who was charged with being absent without leave and facing a court martial have been dropped, the woman and her lawyer say. more »
- Tim Bosma public memorial Wednesday in Hamilton, Ont.
- As plans to honour Tim Bosma take shape for next week in Hamilton, Ont., CBC News has learned the man accused in his slaying purchased a Toronto condo less than 24 hours after Bosma went missing. more »
- Eurovision Song Contest celebrates pop excess
- Techno beats, over-the-top stage antics and pop stars of the past return to the spotlight in Stockholm this weekend as the 2013 Eurovision Song Contest ramps up to its showy finale. more »
Most Viewed/Commented
- PQ's proposed changes to Bill 14 leave critics skeptical
- 2 earthquakes felt in Ontario and Quebec
- Woman accused of murder testifies that she was too drunk
- Pierre's picks: 5 don't-miss events in Montreal this weekend
- Private daycares to strike despite threat of fine
- Body found in burning car in Laval park
- Verdun gets its first bar in over 100 years
- Montreal unveils new locations for food trucks
- Police arrest 18 in 2 separate Quebec drug ring busts

