Depuis le 1 mai 2007
nouveautésLes discussions autour du CN reportées indéfiniment ?Par l'Agence de presse libre, 18 novembre 2008....Incendie CN: l'arrondissement prend les gens pour des imbécilesAgence de presse libre de la Pointe, 15 novembre 2...Compte-rendu du conseil d'arrondissement du 4 NOVEMBRE 2008.Par Marcel Sévigny. Encore ce mois-ci, la pé...Ouverture de sessionQui est en ligneIl y a actuellement 0 utilisateurs et 19 invités en ligne.
|
The Housing Scandal at the Montreal Olympics
[Pour la version française, svp cliquez ici] The Housing Scandal at the Montreal OlympicsIf the Olympic Games are a party for athletes, they’re also a party for all kinds of developers who see the potential for generous financial handouts. The political and economic prestige of such events is more important than humanitarian considerations. Certain developers know this and profit to the maximum from the situation. Clearly, the drama is provoked most among vulnerable populations, who survive difficult conditions throughout the year. That was the case in Montreal during the Olympics of 1976. We’ve all heard about the financial scandal related to the Montreal Olympics, whose debt was finally paid in 2006. But other scandals took place. Many months before the games, the demand for housing for short-term tourists grew considerably. Almost all the landlords of hotels and rental buildings wanted to profit from the situation of “temporary shortage�? that was taking place during the summer of 1976. The result : several hundred families found themselves on the street at the end of the month of June 1976. Happily, if you could put it that way, the end of the school year allowed a few hundred of the families to invade and occupy several schools while waiting for the “crisis to pass.�? It was during one of these occupations at the Jean-Baptiste Meilleur school on Fullum street in the Centre-Sud neighborhood that a group of local activists – of which I was a part – supported the occupation (food, coverings, dishes to make collective meals, etc), and put pressure to denounce this unacceptable situation. We held a solidarity evening that brought together 600 people, and during the entire occupation we made life difficult for politicians who were trying to make political capital during this election year. Large international events are always special opportunities for political and economic players to exploit to consolidate their power and their projects to the detriment of vulnerable populations. That was one of the lessons that I learned from the passage of the Montreal Olympics in Montreal in 1976. - Marcel Sévigny (February 2008) [Translated from the original french by JBS. Thanks to him.] ::: More info on the campaign against these Olympics Game :::Vous devez vous connecter ou vous enregistrer pour écrire des commentaires | 136 lectures
|
RechercheSyndication |