Students in Montreal protest for 8th straight night - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:35 PM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Students in Montreal protest for 8th straight night

Thousands of students marched once again in downtown Montreal Tuesday night, in the eighth straight night of protests against planned tuition fee hikes.

Education minister 'perplexed' by students' counter-offer

Bicycle police patrol at Tuesday night's student protest in downtown Montreal.

Thousands of students marched once again in downtown Montreal Tuesday night, in the eighth straight night of protests against planned tuition fee hikes.

Police said there were at least two arrests, including one for assaulting an officer.

The rally began in milie-Gamelin Park in downtown Montreal, just aspolice were trying to disperse anti-capitalist protesterswho had staged an angry and violent demonstration in the same area earlier in the evening.

The marchers took their protest to Old Montreal and elsewhere downtown.A small group entered the Ville-Marie tunnel that runs under the downtown core, but police headed them off quickly.

Throughout Tuesday, there were a smattering of protests across the province.

Students and professors hang demands on a red maple they planted in downtown Montreal Tuesday.

Just before 1 p.m. ET, more than 100 students and professors gathered to plant a red maple tree at the corner of McGill College and Sherbrooke streets in Montreal,asa "sign of a new beginning."

They hung their demands, scrawled on red paper, for the government to halt the tuition fee hike on the tree's branches.

Also onTuesday evening, students gathered at Molson Park in Montreal's Rosemont district, where they joined union leaders in a peaceful march to mark May Day.

Lo Bureau-Blouin, the president of FECQ, the federation representing college students, addressed the crowd, saying the coming days will be decisive in the 12-week-old student action.

Earlier in the day, Bureau-Blouin, along with theuniversity students federation president MartineDesjardins, had calledfor a two-year moratorium not just on tuition fee increases but on all new university spending while all avenues of financing higher education are explored.

Education minister puzzled by students' counter-offer

Quebec Education Minister Line Beauchamp said Tuesday she was perplexed and disappointed bythat proposal, which the two student groups described as a "counter-offer" aimed at ending a 12-week boycott of classes over planned university tuition hikes.

The student federations' proposal includes the creation of a committee to oversee the management of universities and a plan to analyze the relationship between universities and private enterprise. It also calls for a five-year moratorium on the construction of a new campus for the University of Montreal.

Freeze on spending would hurt students, minister says

Beauchamp said that was not a counter-offer, but a "justification for defending their position that tuition fees be frozen."

She said the Charest government has invested massively in higher education because the universities said they were "starved" for funds.

She said a freeze now would hurt the very people the student federations are representing.

Quebec Education Minister Line Beauchamp reacts to the student federations' counter-offer.

The government plan, announcedlast Friday, includes a proposal to spread the tuition free increase over seven years instead of five, a promise to add $39 million to student bursaries and a commitment to link the repayment of loans to income after graduation.

The most militant of the student groups, CLASSE, rejected that offer.

Associations belonging to the other federations were to vote on the offer later this week, but FEUQ presidentMartine Desjardins said Monday that its rejection appeared inevitable.

Students call for 'estates-general'

Instead, Desjardins and Bureau-Blouin proposed the moratorium until an 'estates-general' on university spending and financing can be held.

Desjardins compared universities to "a sock with a hole in it." She said dumping more money on them won't help improve education.

An estimated 180,000 students remain on strike.