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Reference re Secession of Quebec [1998] 2 S.C.R. 217 was an opinion of the Supreme Court of Canada regarding the legality, under both Canadian and international law, of a unilateral secession of Quebec from Canada.
In contradiction with each other, both the Quebec governement and the Canadian government stated that they were most pleased with the Supreme Court's opinion.
As expected by many jurists familiar with the subject, the Supreme court answered "No" to the first two questions.
The Governor-General of Canada submitted the request for an advisory opinion on the following three specific questions:
and that
The court argued that under international law, the right to secede was meant for peoples under a colonial rule or foreign occupation. Otherwise, so long as a people has the meaningful exercise of its right to self-determination within an existing nation state, there is no right to secede unilaterally.
Since the people of Quebec were able to exercise their self-determination right within Canada, they had no right to secede unilaterally therefrom.
It was soon pointed out by international observers that if it is true that there is no law allowing Quebec to unilaterally secede, it is also true that there is nothing specifically denying it and there is a widespread recognition of a right to self determination by groups other than nation states, such as a people. This right is found in the United Nations Charter, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, among other places.
Since the court saw no conflict between Canadian law and International law on the question (neither would allow Quebec to secede unilaterally), it considered it unnecessary to answer the question.
The Quebec government of Lucien Bouchard stated that it was very pleased with the opinion of the Supreme Court. In an official speech, Premier Bouchard stated that the court had validated the referendum strategy that the sovereignists had adopted with René Lévesque. Quebec was most satisfied when the court made it clear that the question of Quebec's political status was before all a political question and not a legal one. It also liked the fact that the Supreme Court made it clear that the government of Canada and that of the other provinces would have to negotiate after a winning referendum on secession, hence making the use of a UDI unnecessary.
The Canadian government of Jean Chrétien stated that it was pleased with the court's opinion. In Jean Chrétien and Stephane Dion's opinion, the Supreme Court had made it clear that Quebec could not declare independence unilaterally and that the obligation of Canada to negotiate with Quebec was conditional to the sovereignists' asking a clear question. The government of Canada proceeded to draft and later on enact the Clarity Act.