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RCMP, U.S.
Army block public forum on the Security and Prosperity Partnership
The Council of Canadians | July 12, 2007
The Council of Canadians has been
told it will not be allowed to rent a municipal community centre for
a public forum it had planned to coincide with the next Security and
Prosperity Partnership (SPP) summit in Montebello, Quebec on August
20 and 21.
The Municipality of Papineauville,
which is about six kilometres from Montebello, has informed the
Council of Canadians that the RCMP, the Sûreté du Québec (SQ) and
the U.S. Army will not allow the municipality to rent the Centre
Communautaire de Papineauville for a public forum on Sunday August
19, on the eve of the so-called Security and Prosperity Partnership
Leaders Summit.
“It is deplorable that we are
being prevented from bringing together a panel of writers, academics
and parliamentarians to share their concerns about the Security and
Prosperity Partnership with Canadians,” said Brent Patterson,
director of organizing with the Council of Canadians. “Meanwhile,
six kilometres away, corporate leaders from the United States,
Mexico and Canada will have unimpeded access to our political
leaders."
As well as being shut out of
Papineauville, the Council of Canadians has been told that the RCMP
and the SQ will be enforcing a 25-kilometre security perimeter
around the Chateau Montebello, where Stephen Harper will meet with
George W. Bush and Felipe Calderón on August 20 and 21. According to
officials in Montebello, there will be checkpoints at Thurso and
Hawkesbury, and vehicles carrying more than five people will be
turned back.
Founded in 1985, the Council of
Canadians is Canada’s largest citizens’ organization, with members
and chapters across the country. The organization works to protect
Canadian independence by promoting progressive policies on fair
trade, clean water, safe food, public health care, and other issues
of social and economic concern to Canadians.
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