Protest against tuition increase for out-of-province students in Quebec

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Protest against tuition increase for out-of-province students in Quebec
ProtestTuition IncreaseOut-Of-Province Students
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Protesters in Quebec, Canada, express their concerns over the government's plan to charge out-of-province students $17,000 in tuition fees. The measure is seen as a threat to the accessibility of education and the survival of Bishop's University. The government claims it aims to protect the French language by reducing the number of English-speaking individuals in Montreal.

Protest organizer Alex O'Neill, who grew up in Montreal and studies at McGill University, says out-of-province students can't afford to pay the $17,000 the government wants to charge them next year.

Many participants at the protest, which stretched the length of two city blocks, wore purple, the colour of Bishop's University, in Sherbrooke, Que., the province's only English-language university outside Montreal. Sophia Stacey, president of the university's student association, says she worries Bishop's will be forced to close if tuition for non-Quebec students is dramatically increased.

The Quebec government says the measure is partially motivated to protect the French language by reducing the number of English-speaking people in Montreal. Catherine Bibeau-Lorrain, president of Union étudiante du Québec, a student group with 93,000 members from 11 student unions, says the proposed increase will reduce access to education in the province.

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Protest Tuition Increase Out-Of-Province Students Quebec Accessibility Education Bishop's University French Language English-Speaking Individuals

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