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Protesters converge on downtown Montreal to denounce racism, hate

WATCH ABOVE: Hundreds of protesters gathered in downtown Montreal Sunday afternoon to take part in a march denouncing racism and hate. Global’s Matt Grillo reports – Nov 12, 2017

More than 160 groups gathered in downtown Montreal to protest against racism and hate.

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The march made its way from the corner of De Maisonneuve Boulevard and Berri Street to Place du Canada.

“This year there’s been a resurgence of far right and more racist acts and discourse,” Anas Bouslikhane, Solidarity Across Borders member, said.

“People are not taking it seriously. There’s an actual threat happening.”

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Some in attendance took aim at specific issues like Quebec’s controversial religious neutrality bill.

Bill 62 does not allow people receiving or giving public service to have their face covered.

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“It renders these women even more vulnerable and insecure in collective spaces, in public spaces,” Marlihan Lopez, co-vice-president of the Fédération des femmes du Québec, said. “If you limit their access to social services, to public spaces that’s discriminatory.”

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Others used Sunday as an opportunity to speak about racism in Quebec.

“I think that Canada and Quebec and North America more broadly, there is a significant racism problem,” Stacey Gomez, Solidarity Across Borders member, said. “We do have a racism problem.”

 

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