Pubdate: Wed, 18 Feb 2015 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2015 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.montrealgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Geoffrey Vendeville Page: A7 STRIP SEARCHES OF STUDENTS OK: BOLDUC Quebec Education Minister Yves Bolduc said it's OK to strip search students suspected of concealing drugs as long as it's done respectfully and by the book. "It is permitted to do strip searches, on one condition: it must be very respectful, " he said at the National Assembly on Tuesday. "There are reasons for which we can be obliged to conduct searches," he continued. "What's important is that we respect the law and respect the framework that was put in place ( for searching students) and respect the person." Bolduc was defending staff at the Neufchatel High School in Quebec City, who reportedly strip-searched a 15-year-old student last Thursday on the suspicion that she had offered to sell marijuana to her friend. The Coalition Avenir Quebec's point person on education, Jean-Francois Roberge, called for Bolduc's resignation. "It was completely, completely wrong to say that it's OK to force a teenage to get nude just because the principal thinks that maybe she has some drugs on her," he said. "And I would have thought that the minister would stop this and say it's wrong. But no, no, he said it's good and there's no problem with this." News of the strip search broke in the Journal de Quebec last week. The student told the newspaper that her locker had been searched regularly at school for drugs. By her account, she had jokingly sent a text message to a friend on Feb. 12 offering to sell him "pot." A teacher confiscated her cellphone, and the message was passed on to the school principal. After questioning, the student was escorted to a room and asked to take off her clothes behind a blanket. She was quoted as saying that the search left her feeling "intimidated," "violated," "destroyed" and "ashamed." In a communique, the Commission scolaire de la Capitale said the search was "exceptional," but that it was carried out according to "established norms." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom