|

April 26, 2001
Jaggi Singh's Bail Denied
(from indymedia.org)
a26 Quebec: Jaggi Singh's Bail Denied - Political Detention
by ckln 88.1 fm 12:48pm Thu Apr 26 '01
address: Toronto (Canada), on location in Quebec
ckln-news@disinfo.net
Bail was denied this morning to Jaggi Singh, activist with
the Anti-Capitalist Convergence in Montreal. Outraged
activists and observers say his detention is politically
motivated.
a26: Quebec City
Jaggi Singh denied bail - political detention
Today at the Palais de Justice, Judge Yvon Mercier denied
bail to Jaggi Singh, a well-known spokesperson for the
Anti-Capitalist Convergence (Convergence des luttes
anti-capitalistes, or CLAC). Organizers with the CLAC and
their Quebec City affiliate, the Summit of the Americas
Welcoming Committee (Comite d'Accueil de Sommet des
Ameriques -- CASA), called the detention
politically-motivated and evidence that the right to protest
is under attack by authorities. They referred to
irregularities in the court procedure, the abusive treatment
of prisoners, and to mistakes and dishonesty in the judge's
ruling. Jaggi is charged with participating in a riot,
possession of a weapon, and violating bail conditions on a
previous charges. Bail conditions For his decision, Mercier
relied heavily on the fact that Jaggi was already out on
bail, having been arrested on May 1, 2000, at an
anti-poverty demonstration in the Montreal neighbourhood of
Westmount. Around 100 people were arrested that day, and
charged with unlawful assembly. At that time, Jaggi was
released on condition that he not participate in any
demonstration on private property without consent of the
owner, and that he leave any demonstration on public
property should it stop being "peaceful and lawful". During
the hearing yesterday, Jaggi contended that those conditions
were meant to apply only to the city of Westmount. He said
that he had made that oral agreement with the Judge and
the Crown in the city court of Westmount. The bail papers
did not reflect that understanding, but Jaggi never actually
signed the bail papers. In fact, yesterday Jaggi spoke
personally with the Crown, who had reaffirmed that the
conditions were limited to Westmount. The Crown also wished
him best wishes for his release.
Selective interpretation of evidence In terms of the
evidence against him in Quebec City, Mercier based his
decision almost entirely on the testimony of Officer
Francois Collin, who testified yesterday at the hearing.
Collin had testified that he saw Jaggi inciting the
CLAC/CASA demonstration to approach the perimeter and take
down the fence. He said that he had witnessed Jaggi giving
orders to people to bring a catapult up to the fence. He
also said that the catapult had launched molotov cocktails.
Jaggi's "weapons" charge refers to his supposed possession
of this catapult. Judy Rebick, former president of the
National Action Committee on the Status of Women and a
well-known media personality on the left, came to Quebec
City yesterday to testify at the hearing. She had arranged
funding for the catapult, which she described as a
theatrical device mocking the perimeter wall and the seige
mentality of the Summit authorities and the police. In fact,
the catapult was designed to launch stuffed animals.
She also testified that Jaggi had nothing to do with the
catapult and was not in any position to order its operators
to do anything. When asked what she saw Jaggi doing at the
demonstration, she answered that she saw him only twice.
First, she saw him at Laval University, smiling and talking
to people. Later she saw him on rue Rene Levesque, after
protestors first breached the perimeter fence. He was more
than 500 away from the fence and, with a megaphone, was
urging people to calm down and to go to the street party
down on rue St-Jean. Incredibly, today Mercier claimed she
had testified that Jaggi was inciting people to attack the
fence. Interestingly, another witness came to court today to
watch the proceedings. A retired professor from Montreal,
the man had observed Jaggi on rue Rene Levesque, and agreed
that Jaggi had never incited any kind of attack on the
perimeter. Most mainstream media turned off their cameras
and put away their microphones when the man began to
describe what he had seen. Jaggi was arrested later in the
afternoon by several cops dressed as demonstrators. He had
left rue Rene Levesque and withdrawn to the "Green Zone"
street party on rue St-Jean. Jaggi's testimony, which
concluded this morning, focused on his role as an educator.
He talked of the many conferences he has organized, the
presentations he has made, the articles he has written.
While a staunch defender of a diversity of tactics, he
described his own work as strictly "non-violent".
About 70 people filled the courtroom at 11:30am when the
judge made his ruling. The judge began by saying that he
would tolerate no noise from the audience. The 8-10 security
guards in the room were continually ordering people to take
their hands of adjoining seats and to be quiet. Two or three
people were ejected over the course of the hearing.
Officers from the Surete de Quebec and the Ministry of
Security also came in to look over the crowd. The
politicized nature of the courtroom was graphically
illustrated yesterday when court security ordered one man to
take off a t-shirt sporting an anarchist slogan. After the
hearing was read, there was shouting and chanting in the
courtroom, but it didn't last long. Most people were too
upset; some were in tears. A quiet and angry tension settled
in as organizers began making calls and talking to media.
They expect that sympathetic groups will be organizing
solidarity demonstrations within the next few days, to
assert the right to political protest.
|