Source: http://erta-tcrg.org/Incidents/quebec.htm
Timestamp: 2018-06-19 00:31:53+00:00

Document:
ERTA - TCRG -- Québec - langue
Document: Québec - langue
Created: 2003-12-04 - 12:49:32
5: §2 2003
7: §4 26 octobre 2003
9: 7 militants du Mouvement national de libération du Québec (MNLQ, fondé par Raymond Villeneuve) vandalisent l’hôtel de ville de l’ancienne municipalité de Baie d’Urfé. ils laissent des graffitis : «Une île une ville française», «Canadians go home» et «FLQ», ainsi que deux petites bombes artisanales.
11: Il s’agit de Jessie Blagdon Boisvert, Cédric Tremblay, Benoît Laflamme, Luc Laflamme, Marc Boulanger, Serge Provost et Paul-André Desbiens, qui sont arrêtés par le SPVM le lendemain.
13: contexte: dépôt de la «loi 9» permettant les défusions municipales; Baie d’Urfé est une ex-municipalité anglophone et dont l’ex-mairesse, Anne Myles, est unilingue anglophone et militante défusionniste.
15: réactions: Villeneuve: félicitations, mais dit ne pas avoir «demandé qu’ils fassent ça»; Jean Dorion (SSJB): «gestes déplorables»; Diane Lemieux (critique PQ en affaires municipales): le gouvernement Charest/libéral a attisé les tensions linguistiques avec les défusions.
17: Source: La Presse, 29-10-03: A2
18: Le Devoir, 29-10-03: A2
21: §5 2002
22: §6 Montréal
23: §7 20 septembre 2002
25: La Brigade d’autodéfence du français met le feu à un un feu au sous-sol de l'église Saint-Nicolas d'Antioche. Un souper-bénéfice d'Alliance-Québec devait s'y tenir le lendemain pour appuyer la croisade de l'avocat Brent Tyler contre certaines dispositions de la Charte de la langue française.
27: Source: http://www.vigile.net/ds-souv/mlnq.html
30: §8 2000
31: §9 Montréal
32: §10 Janvier 2000
34: L’ex-felquiste Raymond Villeneuve publie un texte dans La tempête où il recommande aux québécois de voler des fusils de chasse pour s’en prendre aux «ennemis du Québec», dont en particulier l’avocat directeur d’Alliance Quebec, Brent Tyler. Un autre texte en octobre est du même genre.
36: En janver 2002 Villeneuve comparaît sous des accusations de menaces et de harcèlement et plaide coupable. au moment du sentencing, en avril, un organisme de l’Alberta, le CRARR (Centre de recherche-action sur les relations raciales), fait une représentation en cour d’appel afin d’obtenir le droit de se présenter comme victime de Villeneuve, argumentant qu’il s’agit d’incitation à la haine contre les anglophones et donc que la sentence devrait être sévère. L’argument est rejeté. Villeneuve se voit imposer une amende de 200$ et 3 mois de détention à domicile, en plus de l’interdiction de publier.
38: Source: http://www.vigile.net/ds-langue/docs/02-4-20-lp-mlnq-aq.html
41: §11 1999
42: §12 Montréal
43: §13 fin 1999, début 2000
45: Le 21 novembre 1999 (journée des patriotes) la Brigade d’autodéfence du français (BAF) est formée, avec à sa tête l’ex-felquiste pardonné Rhéal Mathieu (il semble qu’il en ait été également le seul membre).
47: La BAF s’adonne à du vendalisme à répétition contre des commerces ayant des noms anglais, comme le Green Stop, sur Mont-Royal, trois cafés Second Cup, le Bargain Shop, également sur Mont-Royal.
49: E septembre 2000 des membres de la BAF s’intoduisent dans l’église Saint-Nicolas, coupent la ligne de téléphone, laissent s’écouler de l’huile à chauffage de la citerne et y mettent le feu. Les pompiers arrivent à temps pour limiter les dégâts.
51: Le 22 septembre 2000 la police perquisitionne les locaux de La Presse, cherchant de l’information sur la BAF.
53: Le 20 octobre 2000 Mathieu et une autre personne complice sont arrêtés par le SPVM (la personne non nommée n’est pas accusée). Sur les lieux les policiers trouvent des armes prohibées et le nécessaire pour confectionner des bombes artisanales.
55: le 30 juin 2001 Rhéal Mathieu est reconnu coupable d’avoir (partiellement) incendié 3 cafés Second Cup. Il est acquitté des autres actes de vandalisme de la BAF.
57: Sources: http://www.vigile.net/00-9/101-brigade.html
58: http://spcum.qc.ca/fr/nouv_pub/pre2pubf.asp?commu=124
61: §14 1989
62: §15 Roberval
63: §16 15 août 1989
65: A RCMP patrol boat on a trailer was set on fire outside RCMP headquarters. The word “Québec” was spray-painted in blue over the maple leaf and “Canada” lettering. The sidewalk and outside walls of the headquarters were spray-painted with the letters “OLQ”. A jeep belonging to the RCMP was also spray-painted. On 1st July, slogans had been painted on the headquarters as well as on the office of a federal minister and a provincial member of parliament.
67: Exclu de Kellett et al : insufficient information, perpetrator, motive unknown
69: LeQ 16 aug 89, 3; LeS 16 aug 89, D13; JQ 16 aug 89, 2; JQ 17 aug 89, 7; LEL 22 aug 89, 1; JM 6 sep 89; PP 19-26 aug 89, 1
72: §17 Montréal
73: §18 9 août 1989
75: an arson attack occured at the 4e Bataillon Royal 22e Régiment’s Rosement armoury.
77: In a letter found in the station Métro Frontenac, the FLQ claimed responsibility. The letter claiming responsibility was found by a Journal de Mtl reporter on a tip and turned over to Mtl Police; among other things, it criticized Qc premier Robert Bourassa for his role in the language debate.
79: The arsonist also spray-painted a message “101 FLQ” outside the armoury.
81: Police did not support the suggestion that the incident indicated a resurgence or revitalization of the FLQ movement.
83: Clasification selon Kellett et al :
84: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
85: cible: militaire
86: tactique: fire bombing
88: MDN 10 aug 89; LaP 10 aug 89; JM 10 aug 89
91: §19 Roberval
92: §20 1er juillet 1989
94: During the night, vandals painted the letters “OLQ” and the slogans “Mort au fédéralisme!” and “Québec Libre” on the walls of RCMP headquarters. The office of Federal Minister Benoît Bouchard and of provincial Liberal Member of Parliament Gaston Blackburn were also spray-painted.
96: Exclu de Kellett et al : low-level violence
98: JQ 5 jul 89, JM 6 sep 89, LEL 22 aug 89, 1; JQ 16 aug 89, 2; LeQ 16 aug 89, 3
101: §21 Montréal
102: §22 21 février 1989
104: fire in a washroom of a Petro-Canada station in Mtl Nord.
106: Police found an unsigned document bearing the slogan “for a unilingual Qc”, which also stated that 2 banks would be attacked in March.
108: a 16-year-old boy was convicted. The boy had been recruited for the task by a self-proclaimed separatist who had been previously convicted in the firebombing of an auto parts store displaying bilingual signs, as well as in the bombing of the riding office of MNA Lise Bacon. The man was convicted to 1000 hours of community service by a juvenile court.
110: Classification selon Kellett et al :
111: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
112: cible: affaire
115: MG 7 nov 89, A3
118: §23 Montréal
119: §24 14 janvier 1989
121: Vandals attacked 2 English-language book stores, using slingshots and pea-sized ball-bearings. There were seven holes in the front window of one of the stores in west-end NDG. In the other incident, 6 holes were made in the window of a bookstore near the centre of town, and the store’s glass door was shattered; this was the second incident at this store in less han 6 months. The vandals and their reason for acting against the store were undetermined in both cases.
123: Exclu de Kellett et al : insufficient information, perpetrator, motive uncertain
125: GM 16 jan 89, A5
128: §25 Montréal
129: §26 2 janvier 1989
131: An explosion occured shortly after 10:30 pm at a Verdun carpet store. The store had been previously vandalized on 19 décembre 1988 by “language vigilantes” for displaying bilingual signs. There were suspicions that the fire was connected to the debate over Bill 101.
133: Exclu de Kellett et al : insufficient information, perpetrator, motive uncertain
135: MDN 4 jan 89; MG 3 jan 89, A1, A2
138: §27 St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Qc
139: §28 1er janvier 1989
141: There was a fire at an English-language secondary school. This raised suspicions that the fire may have been associated with the debate over Bill 101
143: Exclu de Kellett et al : insufficient information
145: MG 4 jan 89, A1
148: §29 1988
149: §30 Montréal
150: §31 31 décembre 1988
152: A Mtl Police official confirmed that a fire which caused an estimated 200 000$ damage to the headquarters of Alliance Quebec was delibarately set. An official of the English language lobby-group noted that obscene phone calls, bomb threats and acts of vandalism had been directed at AQ offices and employees following the 15 décembre Supreme Court ruling on commercial signs. The Commissioner of Official Languages said the fire appeared to have been intended to intimidate the AQ organization.
154: Exclu de Kellett et al : insufficient information, perpetrator, motive uncertain
156: MG 31 dec 88, A1; MG 2 jan 89
159: §32 Québec
160: §33 27 décembre 1988
162: A fire-bomb was thrown through a corridor window of the St-Lawrence campus of Champlain Regional College in Ste-Foy. The school is the only English-language junior college in the area.
164: Exclu de Kellett et al : insufficient information, perpetrator, motive uncertain (schools aften targets of bombings)
166: MG 28 dec 88, A4; Maclean’s, vol 102, no 2, 9 jan 1989, 13
169: §34 Québec
170: §35 22 décembre 1988
172: A fire-bomb caused several thousand dollars’ damage to a Ste-Anne-de-Beaupré sporting goods store that had posted English signs. 6 nights previously, the same store was the target of vandals who spattered paint on the walls and scrawled “Loi 101” on a window.
174: Exclu de Kellett et al : insufficient information; perpetrator, motive unknown
176: MG 28 dec 88, A4
179: §36 1987
180: §37 Montréal
181: §38 28 septembre 1987
183: explosion of a bomb in a parking lot near the Laval riding office of Qc Vice-Premier Lise Bacon. The incident took place after hours when the building was deserted.
185: a self-proclaimed separatist pleaded guilty. The same man pleaded guilty to an attack on Nat’s Auto Parts on 23 décembre, the day after a controversial court ruling which struck down a section of Bill 101 and legalized bilingual signs. The man had his sentence suspended and was placed on 3 years probation.
187: Classification selon Kellett et al :
188: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
189: cible: politique
190: tactique: bombe
192: MG 27 nov 87, A3
195: §39 Montréal
196: §40 18 septembre 1987
198: A bomb exploded on an elevated walkway leading from the Olympic Stadium to the Maurice Richard Arena. Police did not know the motive behind the attack.
200: Exclu de Kellett et al : insufficient information; attacker, motive unknown
202: MG 19 sep 87, A3
205: §41 1986
206: §42 Montréal
207: §43 26 décembre 1986
209: 2 rocks were thrown through the plate-glass window of a florist’s shop, one of five businesses involved in a court battle over the use of English on signs. No one claimed responsibility for the incident.
211: The incident occured during a week in which several businesses posting bilingual signs were targets of vandalism, firebomb attack, and threats. Nonetheless, the police discounted these incidents as beng related to terrorism. The store had been the target of a rock-throwing incident in May.
213: Exclu de Kellett et al : low-level violence, vandalisme
215: MG 27 dec 86, A1
217: Remarque: plusieurs attaques du genre en décembre 1986, dûes au jugement de la Cour d’appel.
220: §44 Montréal
221: §45 3 décembre 1986
223: 2 Zellers stores were evacuated after receiving a bomb threat but searches of the premises found nothing. Its believed that the incident was related to the Québec Court of Appeal ruling on bill 101 on 12 December.
225: For 2 weeks the chain was the victim of similar threats.
227: Remarques: hoax
229: MG 24 dec 86, A7; LaP 27 dec 86, A2
232: §46 Montréal
233: §47 23 décembre 1986
235: shortly after receiving a complaint about its English-language sign, an auto parts store on boulevard St-Laurent was the victim of an arson attack.
237: The letters FLQ were sprayed on the window, and a telephone caller claimed that the FLQ “Omega cell” was responsible for the attack. The caller stated the “Québec must remain French” and that the bombing was committed in response to a recent ruling of the Québec Court of Appeal which hd overturned a section of Bill 101 and had legalized bilingual sings.
239: A separatist sympathizer pleaded guilty to this and another attack, and was placed on 3 years probation.
241: Clasification selon Kellett et al :
242: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
243: cible: affaire
244: tactique: arson
246: Remarque: plusieurs attaques du genre en décembre 1986, dûes au jugement de la Cour d’appel.
248: MG 24 dec 86; MG 27 nov 87, A3
251: §48 Montréal
252: §49 23 décembre 1986
254: A bomb threat was received by Simpson’s in Mtl. A search of the premises found nothing. It is believed that the incident was related to the Québec Court of Appeal ruling on bill 101 on 12 December.
256: Exclu de Kellett et al : hoax
258: MG 29 dec 86
261: §50 Montréal
262: §51 24 décembre 1986
264: A Zeller’s store was firebombed during the night.
266: A local radio station received a communiqué signed FLQ, which stated the the Z cell of the FLQ was responsible for tossing 2 Molotov cocktails at the St-Laurent store because the chain had displayed bilingual signs at 2 of tis stores. This was part of a series of attacks upon stores displaying bilingual signs.
268: Classification selon Kellett et al :
269: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
270: cible: affaire
271: tactique: fire bombing
273: MG 27 dec 86, A1
276: §52 Montréal
277: §53 26 décembre 1986
279: A Zeller’s store on rue Granby in Mtl’s east end was the target of a bomb threat. A police search revealed no bomb.
281: Exclu de Kellett et al : hoax
283: MG 27 dec 86, A1
286: §54 Montréal
287: §55 30 décembre 1986
289: A French-speaking caller told Mtl police that there was a bomb in Ogilvy’s downtown department store. The store was evacuated, no bomb was found.
291: A week before the Qc Court of Appeals had decided in favour of bilingual signs, in the wake of that decision several businesses posting bilingual signs had been the targets of vandalism, crude firebombs and threats.
293: A store spokesman noted that although the store had an anglophone image, it posted only French-language signs.
295: Remarques: hoax
297: MG 31 dec 86
300: §56 Montréal
301: §57 30 décembre 1986
303: A few hours after a bomb threat against Ogilvy’s a similat threat was made against Birks Jewellers, causing the store’s evacuation. Birks posted English-language signs.
305: Exclu de Kellett et al : hoax
308: §58 Québecair
309: §59 suite d’incidents du même genre suivant la vente de Québecair à Canadien Pacifique:
310: §60
311: §61 Montréal
312: §62 octobre 1986
314: The departure of a Quebecair flight from Mtl to Val d’Or and Bagotville was delayed, and the plane avecuated, after receipt of a bomb warning. A search revealed no explosives.
316: Exclu de Kellett et al : hoax
318: MG 17 oct 86
321: §63 Amsterdam, Netherlands
322: §64 9 octobre 1986
324: A Canadian Pacific Air flight , en route Amsterdam-Toronto, was diverted to Mtl after the airline received a bomb threat. The plane was evacuated, but no bomb was found. The caller referred to the airline’s role in the controversial takeover of Quebecair
326: Exclu de Kellett et al : motivation probably non-political
328: OC 11 oct 86, A14
331: §65 Ottawa
332: §66 13 octobre 1986
334: A Nordair flight from Mtl to Toronto was forced to make an emergency landing at Ottawa after a bomb threat was received by Nordair’s Mtl office. The plane was evacuated, but a search failed to locate explosives
336: Exclu de Kellet et al : hoax
338: GM 15 oct 86, A3
341: §67 Montréal
342: §68 14 octobre 1986
344: A bomb threat forced the evacuation and delayed departure of a Quebecair flight from Mtl to Sept-Iles. No explosives were found
346: Exclu de Kellett et al : hoax
348: MG 17 oct 86
350: §69 Montréal
351: §70 15 octobre 1986
353: A Quebecair flight between Mtl and Bagotville was delayed for about 30 minutes after a bomb threat necessitated a search. No explosives were found.
355: Exclu de Kellett et al : hoax
357: MG 17 oct 86
360: §71 Montréal
361: §72 1er novembre 1986
363: Passengers had to evacuate 2 aircraft on the runway at Dorval airport after Quebecair and Nordair received anonymous calls about bombs being aboard. No explosives were found. There were at least 5 such calls in the space of a month
365: Exclu de Kellett et al : hoax
367: GM 3 nov 86
370: ---fin Quebecair---
372: §73 Montréal
373: §74 11 mai 1986
375: In a Mother’s Day attack, rocks thrown at a florist’s store broke 2 windows and a sheet of glass inside the store. The store was one of 5 businesses involved in a court battle over the use of English signs.
377: Police commented that this and other recent acts of vadalism were not related to terrorism. The store was again attacked on 26 December.
379: Exclu de Kellett et al : low-level violence, vandalisme
381: MG 27 dec 86, A1, A2; MG 29 dec 86, A2
384: §75 Montréal
385: §76 10 mai 1983
387: a small bomb exploded, blowing the cover off a Bell Canada connecting box on Mont-Royal Ave West.
388: Did not disrupt telephone service.
390: No one claimed responsibility for the blast, but police speculated that it might have been linked to recent fire bomb attacks on Mtl armouries by Friction directe.
392: Classification de Kellett et al :
393: type: left-wing
394: cible: communcations
395: tactique: bombe
397: MG 11 may 83, A3
400: §77 Montréal
401: §78 15 avril 1983
403: A Molotov cocktail was thrown into the alley behind the Canadian Grenadier Guards armoury.
404: This attack was similar to ones occuring in March and claimed by Friction directe.
406: Classification de Kellett et al :
407: type: left-wing
408: cible: militaire
409: tactique: fire bombing
411: MG 16 apr 83, A1; GM 16 apr 83, 14
414: §79 Montréal
415: §80 7 mars 1983
417: 2 fire bombs were thrown at the dowtown armoury of the 3rd Battalion, Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada.
419: A group called Friction directe claimed responsibility in a letter mailed before the pre-dawn bombing. The letter noted the 20th aniversary of the FLQ’s first attacks (7 mars 1963, Mtl), and criticized cruise missile testing in Canada and US policy in Central America. Police had never heard of the group until this incident.
421: Classification selon Kellett et al :
422: type: left-wing
423: cible: militaire
424: tactique: fire bombing
426: MG 8 mar 83
429: §81 Montréal
430: §82 7 mars 1983
432: 2 fire bombs were found discarded in a lane near the armoury of Les Fusiliers Mont-Royal.
434: In a typewritten letter mailed to the Mtl Gazette shortly before the attempt, the previously unkown group Friction directe claimed responsibility for these bombs and 2 others that exploded the same morning in downtown Mtl, at the armoury of the Black Watch.
436: Classification selon Kellett et al :
437: type: left-wing
438: cible: militaire
439: tactique: tentative de fire bombing
441: MG 8 mar, A1; WFP 8 mar 83, 11
444: §83 Montréal
445: §84 6 janvier 1983
447: A group calling itself Le Front des Patriotes du Québec made a bomb threat against Canada Post and also threatened acts of violence against anyone opposing Bill 101, the language bill recently passed by the Qc legislature.
449: Subsquently, searches produced an object made to resemble a bomb that was found in a mail bin at a Canada Post plant in the city of Mtl.
451: Exclu de Kellett et al : threat, device harmless
453: MG 8 jan 83, A3
456: §85 Montréal
457: §86 6 janvier 1983
459: A phone call to the Brossard postal station led to the discovery of a bomb-like object in a mail bin. It was compsed of 5 copper tubes covered with brown paper to look like dynamite, some wiring, a time switch, and a large battery; there was no detonator.
461: The building was evacuated but nothing more was found.
463: The following day a group calling itself “Le Front des Patriotes du Québec” claimed responsibility in a letter to La Presse. A spokesman said the group was unknown to police
465: Exclu de Kellett et al : threats
467: MG 8 jan 83, A3
470: §87 1982
471: §88 Montréal
472: §89 20 novembre 1982
474: 2 bombs were left near Parti Québécois offices in Mtl.
475: One bomb, consisting of 5 sticks of dynamite but no detonator, was found in a package outside the PQ education minister’s riding office; the absence of detonator suggested that it was a warning.
477: The other bomb consisted of 7 sticks, similary wrapped, but including a detonator and a timer set for later in the day. It was left on the steps of the PQ’s Mtl head office in the afternoon.
478: Police thought the 2 bombs were probably the work of the same people.
480: Exclu de Kellett et al : insufficient information, motive and perpetrator unclear
482: MG 22 nov 82, A1
485: §90 Montréal
486: §91 20 novembre 1982
488: police dismantled a bomb that had been planted on rue St-Denis, just outside the Parti Québécois head office.
490: A letter sent to La Presse claimed responsibility on behalf of a “Francophone and Anglophone group” who opposed the new French Language Charter (Bill 101). They claimed to have targetted the PQ because they had refused to make changes to the Bill. The same group had also left dynamite at several other government offices in recent week.
492: Classification selon Kellett et al :
493: type: single issue
494: cible: politique
495: tactique: tentative de bombe
497: MG 22 nov 82, A1; MG 25 nov 82, A3; GM 22 nov 82, 9
500: §92 Sherbrooke
501: §93 19 novembre 1982
503: A package containing 5 sticks of dynamite, but no detonator, was found during the night outside the building housing the Office de la Langue Française. Responsibility was claimed by a group using the slogan (in french) “Fascism will never win”.
505: The same group claimed responsibility for 2 other similar incidents in Mtl on 20 novembre; however, 2 calls to a La Presse reporter linked the incidents to langauge legislation protest and government - public service union negotiations.
507: Exclu de Kellett et al : insufficient information, perpetrator and motive unclear, threat, no means of activation
509: MG 22 nov 82, A1; MG 8 jan 83, A3
512: §94 Montréal
513: §95 16 juillet 1982
515: A bomb was found just before the lunch near the elevator doors outside the main entrance to the Office de la Langue Française, on the 15th floor of a downtown office building. More than 200 people were evacuated.
517: The bomb consisted of 5 sticks of dynamite, a timing device, and 2 batteries, but it had no detonator, leading one policeman to claim that “It was designed to scare rather than to explode”.
519: No warnings had been received.
521: Remarques: threats, no means of activation
523: MG 17 jul 82, A1,A2; MG 24 jul 82, A3
526: §96 1980
527: §97 Montréal
528: §98 13 septembre 1980
530: A fire bomb was found at the Black Watch armoury and was defused by police. Police believed this attempt was related to an attack on the Royal Mtl Regiment armoury which occured on the same day
532: Classification selon Kellett et al:
533: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
534: cible: militaire
535: tactique: attempted fire bombing
537: MG 15 sep 80, 1; GM 15 sep 80, 9
540: §99 Montréal
541: §100 13 septembre 1980
543: 3 fire-bombs were found at the Royal Montreal Regiment armoury and were defused by police.
545: Police suspected a link between this and another incident at the Black Watch and a letter, postmarked 8 september and signed G.P. (possibly Gens du pays), which was sent to United Press Canada’s Mtl office. The letter claimed responsibility for a series of attacks which they said occurred but were never reported.
547: Classification selon Kellett et al:
548: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
549: cible: militaire
550: tactique: attempted fire bombing
552: MG 15 sep 80, 1; GM 15 sep 80, 9
556: §101 endroit?
557: §102 8 juillet 1980
559: Un des ravisseurs de James Richard Cross est appréhendé et accusé d’extorsion, de conspiration en vue de commettre un enlèvement et de détention forcée.
561: Source: Mickolus (1989 : 62)
564: §103 Ottawa
565: §104 20 mai 1980
567: A Québec man was charged with stabbing a Canadian Armed Forces Colonel near National Defence Headquarters. The attack occured the day of the Qc sovereignty-association referendum, and the attacker claimed that he wanted publicity for his view that the QC language law making French the province’s official language was discriminatory. He said he wanted to attack Prime Minister Trudeau, but was unable to do so; failing this, he “decided to become a terrorist and attack the military leadership that morally represents the policies of the federal Government”.
569: Remarques: insufficient information, motivation unclear
571: GM 29 aug 80,9
574: §105 Montréal
575: §106 7 avril 1980
577: The start of a rally of 14 000 women opposed to the negociation of a sovereignty-association mandate was delayed after receipt of a bomb threat. The referendum rally was taking place in the Forum.
578: A police search found no bomb.
580: Exclu de Kellett et al : hoax
582: LaPresse, 8 apr 80, A13
585: §107 Montréal
586: §108 3 avril 1980
588: A pipe bomb punched a hole in a pro-Canada billboard, the fifth such attack in a week.
590: Classfication selon Kellett et al:
591: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
592: cible: communications
593: tactique: bombing
595: MG 5 apr 80, 8
598: §109 Montréal
599: §110 1er avril 1980
601: After a citizen reported a pipe bomb had been placed behind a pro-Canada billboard in dowtown Mtl, police arrived to dismantle the device. A police explosive expert said the device was well-made, the work of a professional.
603: Classification selon Kellett et al:
604: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
605: cible: communications
606: tactique: tentative de bombe
608: Ross; Fournier, 1984: 343; MG 1 apr 80, 2; GM 4 apr 80, 9
611: §111 Montréal
612: §112 30 mars 1980
614: During the pre-dawn hours a bomb damaged a pro-Canada billboard in dowtown Mtl. Police speculated that the individual who planted it was responsible for a similar bombing the previous day.
616: Classification selon Kellett et al:
617: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
618: cible: communications
619: tactique: bombe
621: MG 31 mar 80, 1,2; MG 1 Apr 80, 2
624: §113 Montréal
625: §114 29 mars 1980
627: A bomb damaged a billboard which was flanked by a pro-Canada sign; police speculated that the latter was the target. The bomb was placed in a downtown Mtl parking lot.
629: Classification selon Kellett et al:
630: type: nationaliste/ séparatiste
631: cible: communications
632: tactique: bombe
634: MG 1 apr 80, 2
637: §115 Montréal
638: §116 28 mars 1980
640: a pipe bomb exploded next to a pro-Canada billboard near Beaver Hall Hill, Mtl.
642: Although the billboard’s owners were then involved in a labour dispute, there had been no acts of violence involved, and the police believed the bombing to be politically motivated (many other pro-Canada signs had been vandalized in recent months, and the sovereignty-association referendum took place in May). Police investigators linked this and similar attacks over the period of a week.
644: Classification selon Kellett et al:
645: type: nationaliste/séparatiste
646: cible: communications
647: tactique: bombe
649: MG 29 mar 80, 6; Ross; MG 01 apr 80, 2; New York Times 29 mar 80, 9
652: §117 Montréal
653: §118 29 juin 1977
655: A man apparently blew himself up with a home-made pipe-bomb in his St-James St. West apartment.
656: He was wearing protective gloves, and police speculated he was working on the device when it exploded.
658: Although his apartment was decorated with anti-separatist articles, the police felt it was to soon to form any conclusion on the possibility of political moitvation. The man’s brother had been shot dead 6 months earlier, and no one had been apprehended.
660: Remarques: insufficient information, motivation possibly personal, target unclear
662: GM 1 jul 77, 3
665: §119 Montréal
666: §120 24 juillet 1976
668: A caller using an FLQ slogan («nous vaincrons») warned that a bomb had been placed at the Olympic Stadium (dans une toilette) during an Olympic handball game between Japan and Yougoslavia. A bomb-type device was found but it lacked explosives.
670: Remarques: no primary source, threat, no means of activation
672: Mickolus, 1980: 633

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