Police arrest 1, ticket 3 after students try to set up pro-Palestinian encampment at Universit Laval - Action News
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Police arrest 1, ticket 3 after students try to set up pro-Palestinian encampment at Universit Laval

The protestors were asked by police to take their tents down and were told they would be removed if they set the tents back up, according to two people speaking on behalf of the students.

Students ponder next move after encampment taken down by Quebec City police

A sign reading Etudiantes pour la Palestine hung up in a grassy area between trees.
Quebec City police asked the students to take the encampment down Saturday. Police said the students would be removed if they attempt to set up their tents again. (Louis-Simon Lapointe/Radio-Canada)

One person was arrested and three others were ticketed after students atUniversit Laval in Quebec City attempted to join a wave of campus protests by setting upa pro-Palestinian encampment at the schoolSaturday afternoon.

Over 20students set up tents on the corner of Chemin Ste-Foy and Du Sminaire Avenue before Quebec City police (SPVQ) asked them to take the encampment down.

Police said the students would be removed if they attempted to set up their tents again, according tospokesperson for the students Antoine Grenier.The students werestill able to continue to demonstrate.

In a news release Sunday morning, the SPVQ said its police officers spoke withprotesters and explained the municipal regulations, whichprohibit the installation of tentsonpublic property without having first obtained written authorization.

"The term 'publicproperty'includes Universit Laval," saidWilliam Robitaille, spokesperson for the SPVQ,in an email Sunday morning.

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During the police intervention, three statements of offence were issued to protesters and one person was arrestedto prevent a repeat offence, police say.

David Fortier,another spokesperson for the students, saidthe groupis now deciding how it's going to proceed with the protest. He said decisions will likely come after university officials call him back to discuss the demands.

On Saturday, Grenier saidhe hopes the university can understand and"let us do [the encampment] because we're doing it pacifically and we're not violent at all."

"We're just here to have activities with our people and talk about what is happening [in Gaza] and ensure that the university is behind us on that as well."

Israel launched its war against Hamas after the militant group's attacks on Oct. 7. During the attacks,some 1,200 people were killed and around250 were taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies.About 120 people remain unaccounted for.

Health authorities in Gaza say Israel's offensive in Gaza has killed more than 36,000 Palestiniansand has led to famine,the destruction of key hospitals and, according to the United Nations, the displacement of1.7million people.

Fund managers abide by responsible investment, university says

The group of students calledtudiants/tudiantes de l'Universit Laval pour la Palestine is asking the university for financial transparency and that it disclose any investments with links to Israel, it said in a statement to the media. Other demands include that the university end any exchange programs with Tel Aviv University in Israel, its summer school program in Tel Azekahas,as well as any association with the Joint Canada-Israel Health Research Program.

Fortiersays he doesn't have any specifics on possible financial ties between the university and Israel.

"But the point is also that for many campuses here, it's a very hazy issue and what we want is to be sure 100 per centsure that our money that goes to the university doesn't at all go to anything related to the state of Israel," said Fortier.

The university confirmed Saturday night that the protestors were on site until late at night and that police dismantled the encampment earlier in the evening.

"The encampment does not respect municipal regulations,"university spokesperson Andre-Anne Stewart saidin a statement to CBC News. "The SPVQenforces municipal regulations and Universit Laval respects those regulations in force."

Stewart said the intervention was carried out by the SPVQ, who informed university officials of the situation on campus. But students say police told them they intervened at the request of the university.

According to SPVQ spokespersonRobitaille,police receivedinformation that camps were being set up on university grounds. "The information was corroborated via university security officers. We therefore acted according to municipal regulations," he said.

In another statement, Stewart said the university manages the majority of its investments through fund managers following a policy of responsible investment. The university therefore does not have an exhaustive list of the assets included in these funds, she says.

Stewart said the university's mission is to establish a dialogue with protestors before, during and after any given manifestation.

Grenier says the group of students sent its demands to the university at the same time it was setting up the encampment.