Montreal
protests turns violent
Riot
police used stun grenades, pepper spray and batons to beat back
student protesters in Montreal after they tried to disrupt a speech
by Quebec Premier Jean Charest on Friday.
20
April, 2012
Montreal
police say at least 10 people were arrested and an officer and two
civilians were injured.
Bystanders
were caught in the middle of clashes between police and protesters,
who broke windows at the Montreal Convention Centre.
The
demonstrators, many of whom were masked, stormed the building in
which Charest was speaking around noon and tried to get to the upper
floors of the sprawling complex prior to the start of the premier's
speech.
Riot
police blocked them at a bank of escalators and forced them to leave,
blasting some with pepper spray along the way. One young woman fell
down a flight of stairs and was seen lying motionless on the floor of
the lobby.
Riot
police surrounded the building and projected tear gas canisters at
masked rioters who pelted them with rocks and pieces of asphalt.
Not
far away, demonstrators smashed the windows of police cruisers and
news vehicles while others erected barricades by piling up fences,
traffic cones and other debris. They managed to block an entire main
street.
Inside
the convention centre, Charest joked about the mayhem as he concluded
his speech about a plan to develop natural resources in the north.
"The
(event) that we're holding today is very popular. People are running
all over the place to get in," he said to laughter and applause.
"It's
an opportunity for job hunters," the premier continued. "To
those who were knocking on our doors this morning, we can offer them
a job, up north, as soon as possible," he said to more laughter.
Charest
struck a more serious tone in a scrum with reporters.
"These
things are unacceptable," he said. "This won't advance the
debate, this sort of intimidation and violence."
Student
leaders have promised to disrupt the Quebec economy in an attempt to
force Charest to reverse a decision to increase tuition by $1,625
over five years.
Many
of the protesters were masked and a number of them carried red flags
emblematic of the student movement whose members have blocked
bridges, government buildings and streets across Quebec for three
months.
But
police also suggested the anarchist Black Bloc group was behind some
of the violence.
Jeanne
Reynolds, spokeswoman for the hardline student group CLASSE, refused
to say if her group was behind the violence but confirmed they
"organized the protests that happened this morning."
Asked
if she supported the destruction of public and private property, she
replied by denouncing the actions of riot police.
"I
want to know how far things will go before the government listens to
us," she said.
Leo
Bureau-Blouin, president of the more moderate FECQ, called on
students to "remain calm" and called on the government to
move ahead with plans to negotiate an end to the strike.
The
storming tactics on display at the convention centre appear to have
been co-ordinated with a similar action at a hotel across town where
federal Immigration Minister Jason Kenney was scheduled to give a
speech about the government's immigration reforms.
At
the hotel, about 20 protesters threw themselves against the glass
doors leading into the conference room as several hotel workers and
security guards tried to hold them back.
Eventually,
all the protesters barged through, ran into the conference room and
sat down on the stage where Kenney was scheduled to speak.
Before
police arrived, the protesters ran through the conference room
kitchen and out a back exit.
Two
women protesters told QMI Agency outside the hotel they wanted to
prevent Kenney from speaking because the government's refugee
policies were "anti-gay and racist."
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