COVID has turned Old Montreal, once a playground for tourists, into violent district
MONTREAL — For Fouad Filali, owner of Le Sénateur restaurant in Old Montreal, the families with children who used to visit the historic district have been replaced by young people who sometimes are violent and harass women.
Montreal’s iconic neighbourhood has struggled without many tourists since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and residents, business owners and workers say the area has become more dangerous — especially at night. They say they hope that as Montreal reopens from COVID-19 restrictions and tourists return, the disorder will end.
“It brought a climate of fear,” Filali, who has owned his restaurant for more than 25 years, said in a recent interview about the violence in the district. “Now, I tell my staff when we close (at night), we lock the doors and we don’t open for anyone.”
Last September, several people, including a Montreal police officer, were injured in a shootout in the area. In April, rioters upset at the COVID-19 curfew lit garbage fires across the neighbourhood, smashed store windows and fought with police. Most recently, an 18-year-old woman was shot in the foot and a 19-year-old man was stabbed in the upper body during an outdoor party last weekend celebrating the end of the curfew, which had been in place since January.