2,000 people march through the streets
Police arrested more than 100
people in downtown Montreal on Tuesday night, in an ugly clash with
protesters — many dressed in black and some with bandanas over their
faces — marching under the banner of "anti-capitalism."
A May Day rally began peacefully at around 5 p.m. ET, but it
disintegrated into mayhem and violence within an hour, as at least 2,000
people marched through the streets.Many wore the small red square that represents Quebec's student movement against tuition fee hikes, although this rally was organized not by students but by a group known as CLAC — or the Anti-Capitalist Convergence of Montreal — a group known for its confrontations with police.
Just after 6 p.m. ET, Montreal police declared the march illegal, releasing sound grenades and chemical irritants into the crowd as some protesters hurled rocks and other objects, including molotov cocktails, at police cars.
Protesters dispersed briefly, but then regrouped.
A police car is spattered with paint during Tuesday night's May Day riot in downtown Montreal.Police
said at 10 p.m. ET Tuesday that 34 people had been arrested for
criminal acts, including mischief and assault, and another 75 detained
for breaking municipal by-laws when they refused to disperse on police
orders.Police said those arrested will appear in court Wednesday.
A parallel May Day rally organized by union activists took place Tuesday evening in Molson Park in the Montreal district of Rosemont. It was also attended by many striking students but ended without incident.
The anti-capitalist protest continued with a heavy police presence, even as students gathered nearby at 8:30 p.m.ET at Émilie-Gamelin Park for an eighth night rally — another demonstration against planned tuition fee hikes.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/story/2012/05/01/montreal-may-day-rally.html

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