I would argue that the fact the story is big news is evidence of wide-scale bias. The fundamental point of the article is probably not that Quebec's government was being anal, it's that it was an outrageous decision because the applicant was young and white and female and European and smart. If the applicant was old and black and male and African and uneducated the story gets no traction. In that hypothetical instance the Quebec government is still being anal but the decision would be viewed as the system just doing it's job.
Really? I don't think of you as a pot-stirrer, but I find this a bit much.
To be sure, if you have money; and a great education you are both a preferred immigrant (all other things being equal), and its also easier to kick the system.
That said, the requirement here is that she demonstrate fluency/proficiency in French.
Her
entire academic program was in French; the exception was a single chapter of her thesis, for the straight-forward reason it was submitted for publication to an English-language academic journal.
So she graduated a French-Language University in Quebec, and came from France, where she completed her primary/secondary studies, also entirely in French.
I do think this decision comes off as ridiculous anyway you cut it, no matter her skin colour or sex.
Would someone who was black, from Africa and a male have a harder time? Perhaps, but that certainly doesn't invalidate this story, nor illustrate bias, since we don't have an example before us of someone of colour being denied in an otherwise similar
circumstance.
If said person in our hypothetical example came from a French-speaking African nation, and graduated their studies there in French; and then completely a graduate-level program, in Quebec, entirely in French, but for one chapter of a thesis, I would like to think it would cause as much political and media uproar, it certainly should.
As to comparing this to a situation in which a person was not smart; that's just odd, since what makes this ridiculous is that this is someone having finished a PhD level paper, in science, at francophone university, in Quebec.
That's an essential element of this story, that there is innate and obvious proof of French proficiency.