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Excerpt: "Ten people face charges - most of them for allegedly assaulting police or security guards Tuesday - as students staged a second day of protests to mark the resumption of classes at Quebec's post-secondary schools."

Police stand by as students block an entrance to the Universite de Montreal on Monday in Montreal. (photo: Canadian Press)
Police stand by as students block an entrance to the Universite de Montreal on Monday in Montreal. (photo: Canadian Press)


Quebec Police Clash With Student Protesters for 2nd Day

By CBC News

30 August 12

 

en people face charges - most of them for allegedly assaulting police or security guards Tuesday - as students staged a second day of protests to mark the resumption of classes at Quebec's post-secondary schools.

In all, 21 people were detained, Montreal police said, after riot police entered the Jean Brillant building on the University of Montreal campus for the second time in a day, in response to a complaint from the university administration about classes being disrupted.

The incidents Tuesday took place in the same arts building where masked protesters were confronted by police and security guards on Monday, the first day back to class at many Quebec universities following the suspension of the winter term due to a widespread student strike.

Montreal police briefly detained 19 people Monday at the University of Montreal on suspicion that they violated provisions of the province's contentious Bill 78, the anti-protest legislation now known as Law 12. Bill 78 sets out stiff penalties for protesters who block schools or who fail to provide police with their demonstration itinerary eight hours in advance.

Police in vehicles were also patrolling, but not fully deployed, at UQAM, the University of Quebec's Montreal campus, on Monday. There, dozens of demonstrators, many wearing bandanas on their faces, filed through classrooms clanging on pots, while others staged sit-ins in front of classroom doorways.

The protesters say they are only blocking classes attended by students from associations that voted in the past few weeks to continue their strike.

Most Quebec college and university students have voted to end their boycott of courses, but 9,100 students at UQAM, 2,800 at the University of Montreal, 12,000 at Laval University in Quebec City and 7,500 at other institutions are keeping up their general strike. More than 150,000 students were on strike at its peak in the spring, representing one-third of the pupils at Quebec's universities and CEGEP colleges.

The Quebec government officially suspended the winter term at many universities on May 18 due to the student crisis. Hundreds of courses had effectively shut down at that point, some since as early as February, because of the student boycott, campus pickets and professors' unwillingness to teach, either in solidarity with students or in the face of the workplace disruptions. Under Bill 78, the semester was supposed to resume this week.

The Quebec student crisis emerged from a host of concerns with the province's education system, including financial accessibility and the corporatization of campuses. But the spark for the province-wide protests that clogged streets and shut down classes last winter and spring was the Liberal government's plan to raise tuition by as much as 82 per cent over seven years.


 

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+4 # MidwestTom 2012-08-30 20:00
It is education versus health care; will it come here also?
 
 
+5 # hjsteed 2012-08-31 02:27
From my point of view, it's the health, education and welfare of the 99% against the 1% million/billion aires. I hope the people of planet earth will unite against such capitalist exploitation & greed.
 
 
+5 # in deo veritas 2012-08-31 04:24
Revolt against the student loan crisis in this country would be justified. The penalizing of those who are forced to go into debt slavery for the opportunity to make themselves more productive is unconscionable! Needless to say the teabaggers could care less and will do nothing to ease the situation.
 
 
+3 # cordleycoit 2012-08-31 05:03
Canada has become a right wing paradise with all the trappings of a police state, like it's neighbor to the South. Universities run by hacks and liars students played off against each other by conservative noodlers.Now Canadians are reporter bashing nature hating, racial purists. People raised to hate young people, the truth, nature, People living to lick the boots of authority.
 
 
+2 # Kootenay Coyote 2012-08-31 06:33
Not all of us, by a long shot. But we are endangered by our fanatical Prime Minister.
 
 
0 # Buddha 2012-08-31 07:02
"Most Quebec college and university students have voted to end their boycott of courses" And once again, the People return to their natural form, sheep. And the wolves smile.
 
 
0 # Global Canadian 2012-08-31 08:40
As a Canadian who lives abroad, but spends a great deal of time in Quebec, I have a unique view of these demonstrations. Whilst I share the view that our federal government is moving sharply and dangerously to the right, and spends our tax money on some stupid things, be clear that this is a provincial funding issue and that not all provinces' students pay the same amount for their postsecondary education. In fact, Quebec students have little support elsewhere in Canada because their tuition is by far the lowest in Canada, for example, less than 2000 a year compared to 5000 a year. Their universities are suffering from a lack of money to pay for quality professors, and there has been NO tuition increase for years and years. QUebec is a "have-not" province in Canada - other provinces pay into their economy, their debt is higher and moreover, most of these students have IPADS, smart phones, expensive running shoes and jeans, etc. A couple of hundred bucks here or there is not that big a deal, from most peoples' view. It is barely a cost of living raise. No matter the issue, masked, spontaneous protests and invasions of classrooms are not civilised protests and other violent groups not students have involved themselves previously. This is NOT a popular protest......it says one third voted to stay on strike. that means two thirds think the point has been made, and it is time to quit wasting their parents (and the taxpayers - ME!) money and get back to getting their degrees.
 

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