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victims

In December, five McGill University students penned a petition calling on the university to "make a statement and take action" against a fellow student, described as a first-year male, who they accused of sexual assault. The petition amassed 50,000 signatures in three days. 

This article contains graphic content that might not be suitable for some readers.

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Before International Women's Day, the March 8 Collective — a group representing more than 700,000 Quebec women — met with Quebec's Minister Responsible for the Status of Women, Isabelle Charest. The reason? To discuss the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the province's women, including women in Montreal.

Days after the meeting, which March 8 Collective called "disappointing," Charest unveiled Quebec's action plan to counter the impacts of the pandemic on women. Despite this, local politicians believe the City of Montreal must create its own action plan to better support victims of domestic violence.

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The Government of Quebec has announced a "National Day of Remembrance" to honour the victims of COVID-19 on March 11, about one year after the first pandemic-related closures struck the province. 

In a Facebook post, Premier François Legault said that "we have a duty and a responsibility, as a government and also as a people, to take time out and honour the memory of those who have lost their lives."

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In December 1989, Marc Lépine entered a mechanical engineering class at Montreal's École Polytechnique and separated nine women, ordering the men to leave the room. He notoriously told the class he was fighting feminism before killing 14 Quebec women.

This article contains graphic content that might not be suitable for some readers.

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In a press release Wednesday, the U.S. Department of Justice announced that Sebastien Vachon-Desjardins of Gatineau had been charged as part of a crackdown on "a sophisticated form of ransomware known as NetWalker."

Vachon-Desjardins is accused of amassing "at least over $27.6 million as a result of the offenses charged in the indictment."

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On Sunday, you'll be able to see 14 beams of light shining atop Mount Royal. If they catch your eye, stop to remember the 14 victims who lost their lives during the 1989 "Montreal Massacre."

Mayor Valérie Plante recently announced that the City of Montreal would continue to illuminate the Mount Royal Summit every year in memory of the 1989 shooting at École Polytechnique, one of Canada’s leading engineering schools.

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On December 3, the Select Committee on the Sexual Exploitation of Minors — consisting of 13 cross-partisan members of the Quebec legislature — issued a new report with a clear message to the government: fighting the sexual exploitation of minors should be a priority.

The group studied the issue for 18 months.

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The SPVM is currently investigating multiple shootings that happened in Montreal on the night of Sunday, November 29, that resulted in several victims ending up in the hospital.

SPVM Spokesperson Raphaël Bergeron says the first incident occurred just a little after 5:30 p.m. when gunshots were heard in Montréal-Nord near the intersection of rue Pascal and rue Lapierre.

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