The Concordian

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theconcordian

sports life

Stingers come home empty handed from nationals P. 19

A firsthand account of the unrest in Oman P. 7

Two CSU slates rally on poster night

Letters on P. 20 Full coverage P. 6 Tuesday, March 15, 2011

arts Discovering the realm of a monthly gamer club P. 11

music Canadian Music Week highlights homegrown talent P. 13

opinions CSU springs a leak in mutinous council meeting P. 20

Proposal for closed session turns CSU council into a shouting match Meeting ends early as Pudwell supporters and other councillors clash Evan LePage News editor As CSU president Heather Lucas brought forth a motion to enter closed session at last week’s council meeting, a clearly divided room of councillors and students at large quickly devolved into a disorganized shouting match that ultimately ended the night early. Lucas and the executive maintain that only certain HR issues related to former VP Morgan Pudwell’s resignation were to be discussed in closed session and a majority of councillors agreed, passing her motion soon after it was proposed. “I think it’s very important right now and there’s a lot of personal and sensitive information, not only on Morgan Pudwell’s side, but as well for the CSU executive and council,” said VP Hassan Abdullahi on the motivation for the motion. “However, given her allegations on finances being very grave we take that very personally, so that will be addressed in public session and we will not need to address that in closed session.” But members of the audience and the minority of councillors who voted against the motion made it blatantly clear that they would not leave, at risk of being left out of the loop on the questionable details surrounding Pudwell’s departure and the accusations that went with it.

“I think that this is a travesty,” yelled student Alex Matak over the murmurs and calls to order that followed the passing of the motion. “I’m inviting everyone here who just got a gag put on you to stay in the room with me because I’m not leaving unless you can physically carry me out Heather Lucas.” “I think for a union that calls for transparency and accountability all the time it would be wildly hypocritical to go into closed session right now,” said councillor Michaela Manson before the motion was passed. Manson was one of a small group of councillors who voted against Lucas’ motion that included Lex Gill, Joel Suss and Heba Abdel-Hamid. The discussion that followed the motion was scattered, conflictive in many cases and all of it essentially took place outside of the realm of council since any further discussion of opening the meeting would have needed to take place in closed session, something the executive loudly reminded the overwhelmed chair of repeatedly as he struggled to mediate the situation. The situation became so heated that VP finance Ramy Khoriaty phoned security, asking them to come to the room in case of an incident. When asked about making the call, Khoriaty initially denied it. But when confronted with the fact that he was witnessed phoning them, he admitted that he had phoned because he is a member of Concordia’s Emergency Response Team and was responsible in case of an emergency. “I saw that there might be some conflict, and so that no one got hurt and everything went smoothly I wanted a security agent on the spot,” he said following the

See “Executive memb...” on p.3 Volume 28 Issue 24

More than 50,000 rally against budget

Jacques Gallant Assistant news editor

With just five days left before finance minister Raymond Bachand was set to table his budget, more than 50,000 people from across Quebec converged on downtown Montreal last Saturday to take part in a largely peaceful protest against the tuition hikes and privatization measures that the Charest government is likely to enforce. The protesters, representing close to 150 unions and other organizations, made their way from Place du Canada to Premier Jean Charest’s office on McGill College, causing the temporary closure of several downtown streets. Organized jointly by the Alliance sociale and the Coalition opposée a la tarification et a la privatisation des services publics, the event saw Quebecers march in support of a wide range of issues including tuition freezes, accessible health care, and a moratorium on shale gas drilling. Many of the banners targeted the premier personally, such as a poster that had Charest’s face taped to the head of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, illustating the protesters’ belief that Charest and the Conservative Iron Lady were the same person in terms of policies. ‘’I think they [the government] should be scared,” said Concordia student and former CSU VP sustainability and promotions Morgan Pudwell. “I’m so impressed that so many people from different groups showed up and I think the students

See “Student and...” on p.2

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