Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

PQ's Drainville calls for secular charter to ward off extremists

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jan, 2015 10:22 AM
  • PQ's Drainville calls for secular charter to ward off extremists

QUEBEC — The Parti Quebecois politician behind the doomed values charter wants the province to adopt a modified version in order to fight ''extremists who commit crimes and kill people.''

Proceeding rapidly with such legislation is important because dilly-dallying would amount to giving way to religious fundamentalists, Bernard Drainville said Thursday.

''Are we going to allow extremists, who commit crimes, who kill people, to dictate the democratic choices we must make in a democratic society?''

''The answer is 'No'. I won't give them an inch. I believe putting this off until later is, in a way, giving in to extremists.''

Under the previous values charter, which never was enacted because the PQ lost the election last April, government employees would have been fired for continuing to wear religious symbols at work.

His new proposal includes a grandfather clause that would protect existing employees from being dismissed, although the clause would not apply to employees hired after the charter becomes law.

If the new charter is to become law, it will likely take several years. The next provincial election is set for September 2018 and there is no guarantee the PQ will win it or even that Drainville will be PQ leader.

He is one of several candidates in the PQ leadership race but the perceived front-runner is Pierre Karl Peladeau, the controlling shareholder of Quebecor Inc. (TSX:QBR.B).

The new leader will be chosen in May.

Drainville said he believes the grandfather clause will reassure many Quebecers who were opposed to his original plan.

''That's the lesson I've learned: that the main reason people were against the charter was that possibility of dismissal for wearing religious signs,'' he told a news conference in Quebec City.

''I have heard you and I understand that you do not want people to lose their job.''

Newly hired judges, police officers, prison guards, hospital employees and teachers in primary and secondary schools would be affected by the charter, while employees at junior colleges, universities and municipalities would be exempt.

Although he believes Quebec needs to move now, Drainville acknowledges the chances of the current Liberal government acting on his recommendations are slim.

''I doubt very much that the Liberals will implement what I'm proposing today,'' he said. ''It will take a PQ government to do it.''

Justice Minister Stephanie Vallee said the Liberal government will come forward with some of its own measures over the next few months but that there is no need to rush.

''There are certain acts and measures we will implement but you can't be panicked into them,'' she said.

''You need to take the time to do it properly and to avoid using some extremely unfortunate events from abroad (the Paris shootings) to try to create a sentiment of urgency here.''

Drainville's controversial values charter would have banned all public-sector employees, including teachers and daycare workers, from displaying or wearing religious symbols such as the hijab or the kippa.

The bill had not yet been adopted when the PQ called a general election in early March — a vote the sovereigntist party went on to lose April 7.

Support for the party appeared to reach new heights on the back of the charter, with polls suggesting the proposed legislation was popular with a majority of Quebecers.

Surveys also found, however, that most people in the province considered issues like immigrant integration to be far from a priority and well behind more pressing issues like health care, job creation and fighting corruption.

Drainville's new prposal also calls for the creation of a research centre to look at religious fundamentalism and honour crimes.

He also wants to see a 1-800 number set up to allow Quebecers to report cases of forced marriages or virginity tests.

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Restaurant Owner Who Recorded Toilet Visits Thrilled With Secrets, Not Sexual Impulses

Vancouver Restaurant Owner Who Recorded Toilet Visits Thrilled With Secrets, Not Sexual Impulses
Maegan Richards asked a Vancouver provincial court judge to impose a conditional discharge for Allan Bosomworth, who was the co-owner of Two Chefs and a Table restaurant where he hid a camera in the coed washroom in December 2012.

Vancouver Restaurant Owner Who Recorded Toilet Visits Thrilled With Secrets, Not Sexual Impulses

Imprisoned journalist warned Al Jazeera tactics could come back to 'bite' them

Imprisoned journalist warned Al Jazeera tactics could come back to 'bite' them
An Egyptian-Canadian journalist who has spent the last year in a Cairo prison sounded the alarm about his network's approach to Egypt's precarious security situation months before he and his colleagues were arrested, documents obtained by The Canadian Press suggest.

Imprisoned journalist warned Al Jazeera tactics could come back to 'bite' them

Jurors in Magnotta trial begin seventh day of deliberations

Jurors in Magnotta trial begin seventh day of deliberations
MONTREAL — Jurors deciding the fate of Luka Rocco Magnotta have begun their seventh day of deliberations.

Jurors in Magnotta trial begin seventh day of deliberations

Trudeau promises he'd be accessible PM, unmuzzle bureaucrats, ministers

Trudeau promises he'd be accessible PM, unmuzzle bureaucrats, ministers
OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau is promising to scrap Stephen Harper's brand of message discipline if he becomes prime minister, giving more freedom to bureaucrats, ditching the scripts for cabinet ministers and making them and himself more accessible to journalists.

Trudeau promises he'd be accessible PM, unmuzzle bureaucrats, ministers

White Christmas doubtful for many in more populated parts of Canada: Forecast

White Christmas doubtful for many in more populated parts of Canada: Forecast
TORONTO — The Weather Network says Canadians' dreams of a white Christmas likely won't come true for many of those living in the more populated parts of the country.

White Christmas doubtful for many in more populated parts of Canada: Forecast

Police In Delta, B.C., Pull Wristband Supporting Officer Accused Of Murder

Police In Delta, B.C., Pull Wristband Supporting Officer Accused Of Murder
DELTA, B.C. — A Metro Vancouver police department says it is removing online promotions for the sale of a wristband that support of an officer facing a second-degree murder charge.

Police In Delta, B.C., Pull Wristband Supporting Officer Accused Of Murder