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MONTREAL - For the third night in a row, students took to the streets in downtown Montreal Friday, venting a fresh sense of betrayal and with no end in sight for the 11-week-old strike by 180,000 students across the province.
But student leaders rejected the proposal, and titled the nightly demonstration’s theme as “It’s not an offer, it’s an insult.” Protesters expressed deep disappointment with the government which, until Wednesday had been in face-to-face talks with the three main student groups.
“I don’t feel it was an honest offer,” said Étienne De Sève, a 31-year-old Université du Québec à Montréal student, about the proposal, saying that it does not deal with the students’ core demand – a freeze in tuition fees at 2012 levels.
He voiced frustration with vandals who have been present during other protests, such as on Wednesday night when store windows were smashed and police cars were damaged.
“If I see anything violent or anyone trying to start trouble, I will immediately tell the police,” De Sève said. “These kinds of tactics undermine what we are trying to do.”
The evening started, once again, at Place Émilie-Gamelin, where more than 1,500 people gathered about 8:30 p.m. and then wended their way through downtown. The crowd moved north up Berri St. from Ste. Catherine St. about 9 p.m., forcing a bus to back down the street to get out of the crowd. The crowd turned on St. Laurent Blvd. into oncoming traffic, and some students sat down on the street on The Main near Ontario St. facing an armada of cops.
Police sprayed tear gas at some protesters.
Although it was peaceful for nearly two hours, the march was declared illegal by Montreal police at 10:15 p.m. after rocks and bottles were thrown at police.
A window was smashed at the Canadian Forces recruiting centre on Ste. Catherine St.
By 11:30 p.m. 30 people had been arrested, Montreal police Constable Yannick Ouimet said, and the protesters ended up back at Berri-UQÀM métro where most left and went home.
Several tweets actually congratulated the police for making targeted arrests rather than mass preventive ones.
The evening’s bitter chill seemed to only fire up the students and their supporters after a day of dramatic statements in the media by politicians and student leaders.
Student Marie-Lyne Caisse said the premier may be attempting to divide the student movement but is failing, big time. She noted that mandates to continue the strike are still being approved by students.
Student Marc Thibaud said Charest is trying to win in the court of public opinion, going above the heads of student leaders. “He hasn’t really made an effort to sit down and listen to the students.”
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