Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec premier says pro-Palestinian encampment at McGill 'has to be dismantled'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 May, 2024 01:35 PM
  • Quebec premier says pro-Palestinian encampment at McGill 'has to be dismantled'

His comments followed calls by McGill earlier this week for police to remove the dozens of tents that have been pitched on the field since Saturday in protest of the war in Gaza.

"The encampment is illegal," Legault told reporters in Quebec City. "The law must be respected, so I expect the police to dismantle these illegal campsites, which is what McGill has requested."

McGill's encampment is one of several across the country, including at the University of Ottawa and the University of British Columbia. Early Thursday morning, tents, banners and flags cropped up at the centre of the University of Toronto's downtown campus. Activists at all the sites are calling for their universities to cut ties with Israel.

Questioned about whether Legault's comment were appropriate, the federal justice minister suggested politicians shouldn't be telling police what to do.

"The operational decisions of the police are always theirs independently of politicians," Arif Virani told reporters in Ottawa. "This is always the case in a democracy like ours. … It sets us apart from other countries where the rule of law is not respected, so it's extremely important."

Meanwhile, Montreal police spokesman Jean-Pierre Brabant said Thursday the force is "still evaluating" the situation at McGill.

So far, he said, the encampment has been peaceful and it's not in the interests of the police or the city to immediately intervene.

At the protest site on Friday, pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian supporters held duelling demonstrations on either side of the fence at the main entrance to McGill, with dozens of police officers forming a line to ensure the two sides stayed apart.

MORE National ARTICLES

Two teens killed in head-on crash in northern B.C., RCMP seek information

Two teens killed in head-on crash in northern B.C., RCMP seek information
Mounties in northern British Columbia are asking for any information about a head-on crash that killed two teenagers and seriously injured another man. A statement from RCMP in Chetwynd, northeast of Prince George, says officers responded to the crash along Highway 97 just after midnight on Sunday.

Two teens killed in head-on crash in northern B.C., RCMP seek information

Highway 3 crash kills both drivers

Highway 3 crash kills both drivers
Mounties in southeastern B-C say a head-on crash on Highway 3 has killed the drivers in both vehicles.  It happened near the community of Kitchener, northeast of Creston, yesterday afternoon when one vehicle crossed the centre line. 

Highway 3 crash kills both drivers

Spike in jobless rate: Stat Can

Spike in jobless rate: Stat Can
While Canada’s jobless rate jumped to 6.1 per cent in March, BC gained more jobs.  BC and Ontario were the only two provinces to report an increase in jobs last month, with 66-hundred more people employed in this province. 

Spike in jobless rate: Stat Can

Police 'deeply concerned' for infant allegedly taken by mother in Langley, B.C.

Police 'deeply concerned' for infant allegedly taken by mother in Langley, B.C.
RCMP say they're "deeply concerned" for the safety of an infant allegedly taken by his mother from a home in Langley, B.C.  Police set off an Amber Alert late Thursday after three-month-old Tyler Durocher was allegedly abducted from a home by his mother, 35-year-old Brianne Ford. 

Police 'deeply concerned' for infant allegedly taken by mother in Langley, B.C.

177 die in toxic drug deaths

177 die in toxic drug deaths
The BC Coroners Service says 177 people died in February due to "toxic, unregulated drugs." The service says at least 175 people have died because of the toxic drug supply in each of the last 20 consecutive months.

177 die in toxic drug deaths

Added protection for cyclists in BC

Added protection for cyclists in BC
BC's transportation ministry says it is implementing a new law that will give cyclists and pedestrians added protection on roads.  It says the changes, which come into effect on June 3rd, establish a new minimum distance of one metre that drivers must maintain when passing cyclists and other so-called vulnerable road users.

Added protection for cyclists in BC