Opposition to Quebec's Bill 21 intensifies as minister pleads for calm - Action News
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Montreal

Opposition to Quebec's Bill 21 intensifies as minister pleads for calm

Opposition to theCoalition Avenir Qubec government'splan to ban certain public workers from wearing religious symbols is growing more organized and more vitriolic.

Hampstead mayor likens proposed ban on religious symbols to 'ethnic cleansing'

William Steinberg, mayor of Hampstead, speaks to reporters following a news conference on Friday, where he called on Quebecers to oppose the Quebec government's Bill 21. (Graham Hughes/Canadian Press)

Aweek after tabling the legislation, opposition to theCoalition Avenir Qubec government'splan to ban certain public workers from wearing religious symbols is growing more organized and more vitriolic.

Politicians in Montreal's west end at the federal, provincial and municipal level came together Fridayto speak out against the ban.

Hampstead Mayor WilliamSteinbergtold a news conferencethe ban amounts to "ethnic cleansing."

"This is an attempt to remove those who practice minority religions, leaving only non-believers and Christians in Quebec," he said.

The remarks prompted Immigration Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette to appeal for calm, as he did last Thursday after tabling the bill.

"We need to be respectful to each other. People can have a disagreement about Bill 21. They have the right to their point of view but ... we have to be calm," Jolin-Barrette said.

Anthony Housefather, the Liberal MP for Mount Royal,later stressed that Steinberg's comments did not represent those of the group.

"We are trying to not be divisive, we are trying to be inclusive," he said.

Housefatherand Steinberg were joined at the news conference by, among others,Cte Saint-Luc Mayor Mitchell Brownsteinand MarvinRotrand,city councillorfor Snowdon.

"The proposed law discriminates against a number of those people we represent and seeks to treat those who wear a cross, kippa, hijab or turban as second-class citizens," Housefather said.

Students and staff at Pierrefonds Comprehensive High School in Montreal's West Island, held a protest against Bill 21 over their lunch break on Friday. (Valeria Cori-Manocchio/CBC)

Representatives from theEnglish Montreal School Board, which has already said it would refuse to implement the ban if it becomes law, were also on hand.

The group is planning a protest againstBill 21 next Sunday inCte Saint-Luc.

Bouchard, Taylor come out against proposal

The call for action came on the same day that250 academics co-signed an open letter in Montreal's Le Devoirnewspaper calling the proposed law "discriminatory" and an infringement on "fundamental rights."

Charles Taylor, a prominent philosopher and one of the authors of Quebec'slandmark 2008 report on accommodation and religious minorities, was among the signatories.

The report recommended banning public workers who wield "coercive" state power from wearing religious symbols, such as police officers and judges, but not teachers.

The report's other co-author, Grard Bouchard, also wrote an opinion pieceFriday in La Presse, saying the bill had gone too far in applying theban to school teachers.

He criticizedthe CAQ's decision to use the notwithstanding clause to block the bill from charter challenges.

""The government is taking Quebec down a perilous road," he wrote.

Students at Pierrefonds Comprehensive High School in Montreal's West Island, meanwhile, held a protest over their lunch break on Friday.

Philosopher Charles Taylor, left, and sociologist Grard Bouchard released their report in 2008 into the accommodation of minorities. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

Despite the growing criticism, Quebec Premier Franois Legaultsaid he wants to make the bill law by mid-June.

Speaking to reporters Friday, Legault said he's prepared to compromise on certain elements in the proposed law, but that he believes teachers shouldn't be exempt from the ban.

Legault said a "large majority" of Quebecers are in favour of such a law and that he's comfortable with his proposal, despite the criticism.

"I think what people want is that we settle this issue once and for all," he said.

"I'm confident that people that are managing schools or municipalities, that at the end of the day they have to apply the law, like it was the case with Bill 101, like it's the case with all laws that are democratically adopted at the National Assembly."

With files from Claire Loewen