Bloc leader calls on Canada to let exiled Catalan leader enter the country
MONTREAL — Separatism and national independence were on the menu Thursday at a Bloc Quebecois news conference in Montreal, but party leader Yves-Francois Blanchet wasn’t talking about Quebec.
Blanchet, a fervent supporter of Quebec independence, has made a point of pushing the subject to the sidelines during the federal election campaign, as he knows the sovereignty movement in his province is in decline. But he came out strongly against the Canadian government for what he claimed is a tepid defence of the human rights of Catalan separatists in Spain.
Blanchet said exiled Catalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont should be allowed to enter Canada for a planned visit. And he slammed Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau for his government becoming “a little mouse” when it came to calling out state violence against Catalans.
“There are some rights that have to be respected and there is no reason for the Canadian government not to allow Mr. Puigdemont to come to Canada,” Blanchet told reporters at a community centre in east-end Montreal.