Saturday, August 25, 2007 Undercover officers at Montebello defended.
The three undercover officers did provoke demonstrators, the ones trying to calm them down and not to cause violence. The officers seem to have the situation reversed. If they had been given a rock by the demonstrator why didn't they just put it down and move away from the police lines when organisers and protestors tried to get them to do so instead of struggling with them. It is surprising that the Quebec police even admitted the men were theirs but the explanation sounds totally unconvincing given the video and statements from some of the protesters involved.Here is the article.
Quebec police defend undercover officers Public safety minister rejects call for public inquiry Last Updated: Friday, August 24, 2007 | 9:55 PM ET CBC News Quebec provincial police are standing behind three officers who went undercover during protests at the recent Montebello summit, saying the men weren't there to provoke demonstrators.
"At no time did the officers in question engage in provocation or incite anyone to commit violent acts," Insp. Marcel Savard told a news conference in Montreal on Friday.
The police admitted Thursday afternoon that three masked men caught on video Monday afternoon pushing toward a line of riot police, despite protesters' efforts to stop them, were the force's officers.
The protesters were demonstrating against an agreement called the Security and Prosperity Partnership that was being discussed by U.S. President George Bush, Mexican President Felipe Calderon and Prime Minister Stephen Harper in Montebello Monday and Tuesday.
Savard acknowledged that one of the officers was given a rock by protesters but did not use it.
"One of the extremists gave the rock to one of our police officers and he had a choice to make," Savard said. "He was asked by extremists to throw the rock at the police, but never had any intention of using it."
Protester Dave Coles on Friday refuted Savard's allegations.
"I would testify in a court of law that these guys were lying. They were pushing me around. They had rocks," said Coles, president of the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union.
"They were trying to incite violence. They were trying to get others to throw rocks at the store. Its just a fabrication."
Day brushes off calls for inquiry The police admission came after several days of accusations from the protesters and denials from police that the three men were agents trying to provoke a confrontation between protesters and police.
Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day continued to dismiss calls for a public inquiry on Friday, saying the RCMP has a formal complaints process. There are other posts on the matter at my website on Canadian politics.
"The thing that was interesting in this particular incident, three people in question were spotted by protesters because were not engaging in violence," Day said.
"They were being encouraged to throw rocks and they were not throwing rocks, it was the protesters who were throwing the rocks. That's the irony of this."
On Friday, politicians and protesters alike were still demanding answers about the incident.
Quebec Opposition public security critic Sylvie Roy, ADQ MNA for Lotbinière, said in an interview that the province's Public Security Minister Jacques Dupuis has to answer for the police actions.
Protester considers pressing charges Coles, who tried to hold the masked men back, said he is considering pressing charges against the undercover officer who pushed him.
"Criminal acts were committed. They were shoving me and others," he said Friday. "We want an arm's-length independent inquiry of what's going on here."
A video posted on YouTube Tuesday showed three burly men dressed in black with bandanas over their faces pushing past Coles and other protesters in a designated protest area. One man was carrying a rock.
In the video, the protesters told the men to leave and put down the rock, and accused them of being agents provocateurs. The men broke through the police line and were handcuffed by police.
The video has been viewed 190,000 times since it was posted online on Tuesday.
The police later admitted the men were its officers, but said they were there to maintain order and were not trying to incite violence.
With files from the Associated Press
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