Summary

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Pierre Elliott Trudeau and Robert Bourassa attending the funeral of Pierre Laporte. Credit: Beck/Montreal Star/Library and Archives Canada/PA-151863

On 5 October 1970, the Front de Libération du Québec (FLQ) kidnapped British Trade Commisoner James Cross from his home in Montréal. Soon after, Pierre Laporte, the deputy premier of Quebec, was also kidnapped. The ensuing crisis, known as the October Crisis, lasted almost three months – and included the only peacetime invocation of the War Measures Act. 

The morning of Cross' kidnapping, the Department of External Affairs set up the Task Force on Kidnapping. Throughout the October Crisis, the Task Force consulted with other federal agencies, provincial agencies in Quebec, the RCMP, the British government, and the Cuban and Algerian governments. The documents in this briefing book give a picture of the Task Force's work, as well as the federal government's thoughts and positions during the October Crisis. 

Each archival file is uploaded in it's entirety. Key documents from the "Policy" files have also been extracted and organized into a timeline. Other files from the Task Force have been organized thematically: Media and Public Reaction, Statements and Speeches, FLQ, Policy, and Oral History Program.

Summary