Tag Archives: ottawa

King Charles proclaimed Canada’s new head of state

TORONTO — King Charles III was officially proclaimed Canada’s monarch Saturday in a ceremony in Ottawa.

Charles automatically became king when Queen Elizabeth II died Thursday. But like the ceremony in the United Kingdom hours earlier, the accession ceremony in Canada is a key constitutional and ceremonial step in introducing the new monarch to the country.

Charles is now is the head of state in Canada, which is a member of the British Commonwealth of former colonies.

“Canada has enjoyed a long history and a close friendship with His Majesty King Charles III, who has visited our country many times over the years,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a statement.

“On behalf of the Government of Canada, we affirm our loyalty to Canada’s new King, His Majesty King Charles III, and offer him our full support.”

Visits by Charles over the years have attracted sparse crowds.

Though Canadians are somewhat indifferent to the monarchy, many had great affection for Elizabeth, whose silhouette marks their coins. She was the head of state for 45% of Canada’s existence and visited the country 22 times as monarch.

Overall, the antiroyal movement in Canada is minuscule, meaning that Charles will almost certainly remain king of Canada.

One reason is that abolishing the monarchy would mean changing the constitution. That’s an inherently risky undertaking, given how delicately it is engineered to unite a nation of 37 million people that embraces English-speakers, French-speakers, Indigenous tribes and a constant flow of new immigrants.

“Politically, I think there is no appetite for any kind of constitutional upheaval,” said Robert Bothwell, a professor of Canadian history and international relations at the University of Toronto.

Trudeau attended the ceremony where the Chief Herald of Canada read the proclamation on the accession of the new sovereign.

Also taking part was Governor General Mary Simon, who is the representative of the British monarch as head of state, a mostly ceremonial and symbolic position. She is an Inuk and is the first Indigenous person to hold the position.

A 28-member band of the Canadian Armed Forces played “God Save the King” during a 21-run gun salute. Canada’s national anthem marked the end of the ceremony.

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Ottawa braced for Canada Day protest by ‘freedom convoy’ supporters | Canada

Residents of downtown Ottawa are bracing for a Canada Day unlike any other, after “freedom convoy” protesters vowed to return to Parliament Hill on 1 July, and maintain a presence over the remainder of the summer.

Every Canada Day, people congregate on Parliament Hill in Ottawa to watch musical performances and fireworks on the anniversary of Canadian confederation. This year, it will probably be difficult for police to distinguish between celebrators and convoy members – which is what protesters are banking on.

In late January, groups opposed to vaccine and mask mandates drove tractor-trailers and other large vehicles into Ottawa’s downtown core and set up camp. The ensuing three-week occupation of the capital city was a traumatic experience for many locals, who faced harassment, incessant noise and other unwelcome encounters, said Ariel Troster, a candidate for city council in Ottawa’s Somerset ward.

“Many people were driven from their homes, many were subjected to harassment, there were at least two cases where people defecated on people’s front steps. There were reports of apartment buildings where convoy people took over the laundry room and wouldn’t leave,” said Troster. “Not to mention the symbols of hatred, which were quite visible not just on the Hill but in the neighbourhoods.”

Group communications on Telegram, YouTube videos and other channels show convoy sympathisers believe in white replacement theory and other conspiracies. QAnon activists and propaganda were often seen at the wintertime occupation.

It ultimately cost the city $36m in policing costs and has resulted in a proposed class action lawsuit against protest organisers.

Now that Canada has dropped most mandates, the convoyers appear to be demanding Justin Trudeau’s resignation as prime minister. They have been gaining traction with Conservative politicians, recently having held a meeting with their “allies” in parliament.

The Ottawa police service (OPS) has pledged to foil any new attempt to occupy the city. The force is under immense pressure to get Canada Day right after its many failures to police the previous occupation.

At a police services board meeting on Monday, the interim OPS chief, Steve Bell, said a heightened police presence and road barricades limiting the number of vehicles permitted downtown may not be able to keep convoyers arriving on foot away, but it will prevent people from setting up camp.

“Canada Day’s a very important day to Canadians. It’s a day where we celebrate our country and all the good things in it. But people, when they come, they need to be lawful. And they need to be respectful of our community,” Bell said.

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Will Smith: Chris Rock’s brother says Oscars slap ‘eats’ at him

Chris Rock’s brother would like to see Will Smith stripped of his new best actor Oscar.

In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Kenny Rock discussed his feelings about his brother being slapped by Will Smith at the Oscars.

“It eats at me watching it over and over again because you’ve seen a loved one being attacked and there’s nothing you can do about it,” Kenny Rock told the Times. “Every time I’m watching the videos, it’s like a rendition that just keeps going over and over in my head.”

“My brother was no threat to him and you just had no respect for him at that moment,” he added. “You just belittled him in front of millions of people that watch the show.”

Smith hit Chris Rock after Rock joked about his wife Jada Pinkett Smith’s close-cut hairstyle.

Pinkett Smith suffers hair loss due to alopecia.

Kenny Rock said his brother didn’t know about her medical condition and told the Times he would like to see the the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences take back the best actor Oscar Smith won that night for his performance in “King Richard.”

Days after the Oscars, the Academy announced that it had “initiated disciplinary proceedings” against Smith.

Smith later resigned from the Academy.

David Rubin, the Academy’s president, said in a statement that the group “will continue to move forward with our disciplinary proceedings against Mr. Smith for violations of the Academy’s Standards of Conduct, in advance of our next scheduled board meeting on April 18.”

Another one of Rock’s brothers, comedian Tony Rock, has also spoken out in support of his sibling.

Chris Rock said during a comedy show days after the incident that he was still “processing” what had happened and plans to speak on it at a later date.

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Canada trucker protest – live: Police use pepper spray and stun grenades in bid to clear Ottawa trucks

‘It’s intimidating’: Ottawa residents furious about Canada trucker protests

Police in Ottawa made forceful arrests, using pepper spray and stun grenades as law enforcement steps up its response to the trucker protests that have gripped the Canadian capital for weeks, in demonstration against Covid-19 restrictions and vaccine mandates.

Riot police armed with batons and rifles moved to clear out sections of downtown Ottawa on Saturday, where protesters have parked trucks and largely disrupted the flow of normal life in the city. The New York Times reported that some arrests were made at gunpoint.

The assembled anti-vaccine mandate activists chanted, “Shame on you!” at officers as they made arrests.

Canada’s parliament has shutdown and cancelled plans for a debate about the implementation of the Emergencies Act amid the ongoing police operation.

Under the Emergencies Act invoked by prime minister Justin Trudeau, law enforcement officials have the ability to arrest people for obstruction of roadways and disruptive behaviour. Authorities also have the power to seize vehicles, freeze bank accounts, and cancel licences.

Police started moving in on Friday morning and have been slowly, but steadily advancing, pushing protesters back towards the centre of the convoy.

Twenty-one vehicles were towed and least 100 people were taken into custody, according to officials, with some demonstrators found with smoke grenades and fireworks in their bags.

Since Wednesday, increasingly stern messages to truckers have warned them to go or face criminal charges. Many appeared determined to stay, but quietly some have heeded the warnings and left.

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Freedom Convoy in Canada: Covid-19 protesters and police face off in Ottawa amid freezing conditions

Tensions between Canadian authorities and protesters have been simmering over the last few weeks as crowds and idling trucks filled the capital city, demanding the elimination of Covid-19 preventative measures including mask and vaccination requirements.
On Friday, the gridlock reached a crescendo when Ottawa police say protesters assaulted officers and tried to remove their weapons. One person was arrested after throwing a bicycle toward a police horse, police said, and by the end of the day more than 100 were arrested and 21 vehicles were towed.
“You must leave. You must cease further unlawful activity and immediately remove your vehicle and/or property from all unlawful protest sites. Anyone within the unlawful protest site may be arrested,” police warned early Saturday.

Demonstrators have been blockading Ottawa streets since January 29; despite threats of legal consequences, many have shown no signs of backing down. In response, city, provincial and federal law enforcement officers began an unprecedented operation Friday morning to remove protesters along with their vehicles.

And while some people have voluntarily left the scene, dozens continued to clog the streets in and around Parliament on Friday as snow fell and bitter temperatures remained below freezing.

The situation prompted the Canadian House of Commons to cancel its meeting Friday, House Speaker Anthony Rota said in a statement. The meeting was slated to discuss the Canadian government’s invoking the Emergencies Act on Monday due to the protests, and officials say they hope Parliament will resume Saturday.

The Emergencies Act — which is being invoked for the first time in the country since it passed in 1988 — can provide for the use of the military, but may not necessarily lead to that, and the prime minister said the government is not bringing them in.

The points of contention have also become more delicate in recent days as some protesters placed young children between them and police. CNN has observed those children on the protest site in the last several days.

On Saturday morning, the downtown core remained quiet as the standoff continues. Police will try to retake more streets, which could lead to more confrontations.

More than 100 checkpoints remain to keep more protesters from entering the city.

Legislators resumed emergency debate on the Emergencies Act.

DC prepares for potential similar protests

A primary goal of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s invoking of the Emergencies Act is help curtail funding to Ottawa demonstrators, officials have said.

And Trudeau has pointed out that some people in the US as well as elsewhere are funneling funding to the protesters.

“We see that roughly half of the funding that is flowing to the barricaders here is coming from the United States. The goal of all measures, including financial measures in the Emergencies Act, is to deal with the current threat only, and to get the situation fully under control.”

Meanwhile, officials in US are concerned that similar unrest may arise in Washington, DC, as President Joe Biden prepares for the State of the Union address on March 1.

The US Capitol Police has begun coordinating with local, state and federal law enforcement agencies in anticipation of a potential trucker convoy descending on Capitol Hill. The preparation efforts include Washington’s Metropolitan Police Department, the United States Park Police, the United States Secret Service and the DC National Guard.

Organizers face charges

Several people arrested earlier this week have been charged in the protests, which in recent weeks have evolved from opposition to a trucker vaccine mandate to encompassing a disdain for all Covid-19 safety measures.

Patrick James King, 44, of Red Deer, Alberta, was arrested Friday, according to Ottawa Police.

King is charged by the Criminal Investigations Section with mischief, counseling to commit the offense of mischief, counseling to commit the offense of disobeying court order, and counseling to commit the offense of obstructing police.

King will appear in court on Saturday.

He is the third organizer to be arrested by law enforcement in Ottawa.

On Friday, Ottawa police confirmed the arrests of organizers Tamara Lich, 49, and Christopher John Barber, 46.

Lich was charged with counseling to commit the offense of mischief and Barber has been charged with counseling to commit the offense of mischief, counseling to commit the offense of disobeying a court order, and counseling to commit the offense of obstructing police.

Barber had a contested bail hearing Friday, attorney Diane Magas said in an email to CNN. He was released on the condition that he leave Ottawa and a bond, she added. Lich is scheduled to appear in court Saturday morning for her arraignment.

This week, blockades to border crossings in Alberta and Ontario culminated in arrests being made as police cleared the areas. Four people have been charged with conspiracy to commit murder at the blockade at Coutts, Alberta, and multiple weapons and rounds of ammunition were seized.

CNN’s Paula Newton, Paradise Afshar, Travis Caldwell, Raja Razek, Chris Boyette, Amir Vera, Chuck Johnston and Jenn Selva contributed to this report.



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Freedom Convoy in Canada: Canadian police working to clear Ottawa downtown of protesters say they have arrested more than 100 demonstrators

“Anyone who fell, got up and walked away. We’re unaware of any injuries,” police said on Twitter.

One person was arrested when a bicycle was thrown in the direction of a horse farther down the line, police said.

City, provincial and federal law enforcement officers began an unprecedented operation Friday morning to remove protesters and their trucks and cars that have been blockading Ottawa’s streets for weeks. By Friday night, more than 100 people had been arrested and 21 vehicles were towed.

“You must leave. You must cease further unlawful activity and immediately remove your vehicle and/or property from all unlawful protest sites,” police tweeted on three occasions Friday night. “Anyone within the unlawful protest site may be arrested.”

At an afternoon news conference, interim Ottawa Police Chief Steve Bell said authorities would work all day and all night to move protesters out.

“We’re in control of the situation on the ground and continue to push forward to clear our streets,” Bell said.

Several trucks and cars have voluntarily left the protest but dozens continue to block streets in and around Parliament.

Ottawa police earlier tweeted protesters placed children between police operations and the protest site.

“The children will be brought to a place of safety,” the tweet said.

CNN has observed those children on the protest site in the last several days. Bell said police have not needed to interact with The Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa in connection with children in the crowd. The society, according to its website, is a non-profit community organization funded by Ontario’s government and is legally mandated to protect children and youth from abuse and neglect.

“Even through all the planning, it still shocks and surprises me that we are seeing children put in harm’s way, in the middle of a demonstration where a police operation is unfolding,” Bell said. “We will continue to look after their safety and security but we implore all the parents who have kids in there, get the kids out of there.”

Local media showed live pictures of several arrests that occurred earlier Friday without incident. Police searches and arrests took place at a location less than a half-mile from the main protest site at Parliament Hill.

In his news conference earlier Friday, Bell said no protesters were hurt during the day and one officer suffered minor injuries.

Debate in Parliament on using the Emergencies Act was slated to continue Friday, but the House of Commons will not meet because of police activity in downtown Ottawa, House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota said in a statement.

Ottawa police on Friday confirmed the arrests of two protest organizers, Tamara Lich, 49, and Christopher John Barber, 46.

Lich was charged with counseling to commit the offense of mischief and Barber has been charged with counseling to commit the offense of mischief, counseling to commit the offense of disobeying a court order, and counseling to commit the offense of obstructing police.

Barber had a contested bail hearing Friday, attorney Diane Magas said in an email to CNN. He was released on conditions and a bond, she added. Lich is scheduled to appear in court Saturday morning for her arraignment.

Video posted on social media shows Lich interacting with a police officer, then being handcuffed and led away to a police cruiser.

Lich has encouraged protesters to convene in Ottawa, and recently called for supporters to continue their protest despite it being declared unlawful. She created a GoFundMe campaign for the “Freedom Convoy” which raised millions of dollars before it was suspended by the platform.
The convoy first arrived in Ottawa on January 29 to express their disapproval of a vaccine mandate to enter the country or face testing requirements. Over the course of more than two weeks, the protest has since spiraled into a wider grievance against all Covid-19 measures, including mask-wearing and vaccinations.
Ottawa police began erecting barriers and fencing throughout the downtown core Thursday in an effort to clear the area of demonstrators, who have used trucks to block city roads and remained defiant amid calls by police to disperse.

Overnight, the three police forces hardened the perimeter in the downtown core, which includes checkpoints at on-ramps from highways and side streets.

The secured area would ensure that those seeking entry for an “unlawful reason such as joining a protest cannot enter the downtown core,” according to Bell.

With nearly 100 checkpoints, the perimeter encompasses most of Ottawa’s downtown area and is far larger than the protest footprint to date.

Those who live, work or have a lawful reason to be in the area would be allowed access, authorities said.

Trudeau defends call for emergency powers

Amid opposition in Parliament, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau defended his decision to invoke emergency powers to put an end to the demonstrations during an address Thursday to legislators.

Officials have said a primary aim of invoking the Emergencies Act is to stifle funding to the demonstrators in Ottawa.

“These illegal blockades are being heavily supported by individuals in the United States and from elsewhere around the world,” Trudeau said. “We see that roughly half of the funding that is flowing to the barricaders here is coming from the United States. The goal of all measures, including financial measures in the Emergencies Act, is to deal with the current threat only, and to get the situation fully under control.”

The act, passed in 1988 and never before invoked, can temporarily suspend citizens’ rights to free movement or assembly. It can also provide for the use of the military, but Trudeau has said this would not be necessary.

“We did it to protect families and small businesses. To protect jobs and the economy. We did it because the situation could not be dealt with under any other law in Canada,” Trudeau said. “For the good of all Canadians, the illegal blockades and occupations have to stop, and the borders have to remain open.”

Border crossing blockades in Alberta and Ontario came to an end this week, with arrests being made as police cleared the areas. Four individuals have been charged with conspiracy to commit murder at the blockade at Coutts, Alberta, and multiple weapons and rounds of ammunition were seized.
Another blockade in Manitoba ended without incident, authorities said. The port of entry connecting Surrey, British Columbia to Blaine, Washington, has also been reopened.
Candice Bergen, interim leader of the Conservative Party, said Wednesday the party won’t be supporting a motion by the federal government to fully use those powers, according to CNN newsgathering partner CTV.

“The first act that he does when he has a chance to do something — he doesn’t go through step one, two, three — he goes straight to 100 and invokes the Emergencies Act,” Bergen told CTV News. “I don’t think anything that we will see will change our mind, we will be opposing it.”

The government must propose a motion in both the House and Senate explaining why federal officials need the powers and specifying what actions will be taken, then both the House and Senate must confirm the motions, according to CTV.

The federal government will work with premiers across the country “until the situation is resolved,” Trudeau said.

“Like I said on Monday, the scope of the Emergencies Act is time-limited and targeted as well as reasonable and portioned. It strengthens and supports law enforcement agencies, so they have more tools to restore order and protect critical infrastructure.”

CNN’s Raja Razek, Chris Boyette, Amir Vera and Jenn Selva contributed to this report.



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Ottawa, Canada Protests: Live Updates

Video
Officials have warned people protesting against coronavirus restrictions in the Canadian capital to leave immediately or face arrest.CreditCredit…Brett Gundlock for The New York Times

Twenty-two days after a trucker convoy rumbled into Canada’s capital to protest pandemic restrictions, hundreds of police in downtown Ottawa moved in to arrest protesters Friday morning, hoping to end weeks of gridlock that have roiled the city, infuriated local residents and shaken the country.

After a night of unusually heavy snowfall, during which police made several arrests, rows of police officers in fluorescent jackets were seen steadily edging toward protesters on Parliament Hill, backed by at least two armored vehicles, and tactical officers armed with rifles and wearing helmets.

At 4:45 p.m., after several hours of making arrests, police cleared hundreds of protesters from a major intersection outside the Canadian Senate, where a truck blockade has been disrupting daily life.

Earlier, B.J. Dichter, a spokesman for the trucker’s convoy, wrote on Twitter that it was time for protesters to leave, saying that the police smashed the windows of one driver’s truck.

Images on Canadian television showed police dragging one recalcitrant protester on the snowy ground near a truck draped with a Canadian flag.

Several heavy tow trucks whose license plates had been removed and company names covered with Ottawa police stickers were towing protesters’ trucks away. Police said 21 vehicles had been towed.

Ottawa Police Service said that as of Friday afternoon, 70 people had been arrested on various charges, including “mischief,” a serious offense under Canada’s criminal law, which can carry a prison term of up to 10 years.

Among those arrested on Thursday night was Tamara Lich, a leading activist, fund-raiser and singer who in the past has advocated the secession of Canada’s western provinces. She has become one of the main voices of the protest movement.

The police mobilization comes after mounting criticism that law enforcement has moved too slowly to end the protests, permitting protesters to taunt local residents for wearing masks, honk their horns in quiet residential neighborhoods and undermine local businesses.

Law enforcement have created a perimeter with about 100 checkpoints in Ottawa’s downtown core, to keep anyone but residents from entering.

There was a sense of anticipation across the trucker encampment as reports trickled in from their organizers via a shared text message chain that police cruisers were seen massing in numbers outside of the demonstration.

“They’re coming in,” said one man wearing a Canadian flag as a cape. “They’re going to corral us.”

While it was proceeding cautiously, the police operation appeared to mark the culmination of a tenacious protest that has reverberated around the world, and been a seminal moment in the history of Canadian civil disobedience and law enforcement. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took the rare step this week of declaring a national public order emergency — the first such declaration in half a century — to end the protests.

The logjam in the nation’s capital, the weekslong blockade of an Ontario bridge that is vital to automakers’ supply chains, and the media projection of all that onto the global stage have given the protests an outsized megaphone and impact.

As the police move to clamp down on the protests, the so-called “Freedom Convoy” will likely live on long after the last trucks depart — if only as a vivid template of how civil disobedience can be effective, in particular in a liberal democracy where the threshold for law enforcement intervening to stop demonstrations can be high.

Much like Occupy Wall Street in 2011, the Canada convoys show that what seem like fringe political movements can gather force at a time of anxiety — and when the world’s cameras are pointed at them. Back then, the driving force was anger over endemic social inequality. These days it is a lethal global pandemic.

In addition to Ms. Lich, Chris Barber, another main organizer, was also arrested on Thursday. Ms. Lich faces one charge for “counseling to commit the offence of mischief,” and Mr. Barber was charged with “counselling to commit the offence of mischief, counselling to commit the offence of disobey court order and counselling to commit the offence of obstruct police,” the Ottawa police said in statements on Friday. The two organizers were due in court on Friday.

Ms. Lich, of Medicine Hat, Alberta, has emerged as the public face and the most visible leader of the trucker convoy. She is a former fitness instructor, who has worked in the energy sector and sung and played guitar in a band called “Blind Monday” in Medicine Hat, Alberta.

The protests began weeks ago with a loosely organized group of truckers objecting to a requirement that they be vaccinated if they cross the U.S.-Canada border. They expanded into a broader movement opposed to an array of pandemic measures and to Mr. Trudeau generally.

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Canadian police start arresting protesters in Ottawa

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — Police began arresting protesters and towing away trucks Friday in a bid to break the three-week, traffic-snarling siege of Canada’s capital by hundreds of truckers angry over the country’s COVID-19 restrictions.

In an operation that unfolded slowly and methodically in the morning, officers were seen going door to door along a line of trucks, campers and other vehicles parked on Ottawa’s snow-covered streets.

Some protesters surrendered and were taken into custody, police said. Some were led away in handcuffs. One person being taken away carried a sign that read “Mandate Freedom.”

Many of the truckers remained defiant.

“Freedom was never free,” said trucker Kevin Homaund, of Montreal. “So what if they put the handcuffs on us and they put us in jail?”

Police made their first move to end the occupation late Thursday with the arrest of two key protest leaders. They also sealed off much of the downtown area to outsiders to prevent them from coming to the aid of the self-styled Freedom Convoy protesters.

The capital represented the movement’s last stronghold after three weeks of demonstrations and blockades that shut down border crossings into the U.S., caused economic damage to both countries and created a political crisis for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. They also shook Canada’s reputation for civility, with some foes of the unrest blaming the influence of the United States.

Over the past weeks, authorities had hesitated to move against many of the protesters around the country, in part for fear of violence. The demonstrations have drawn right-wing extremists and veterans, some of them armed.

Pat King, one of the protest leaders in Ottawa, told truckers, “Please say peaceful,” while also threatening the livelihoods of the tow truck drivers assisting the police.

“To the tow truck drivers, you are committing career suicide,” King said on Facebook. “We know where the trucks came from.”

With police and the government facing accusations that they let the protests gain strength and spread, Trudeau on Monday invoked Canada’s Emergencies Act, giving law enforcement extraordinary authority to declare the blockades illegal, tow away trucks, arrest the drivers, suspend their licenses and freeze their bank accounts.

Ottawa police made it clear on Thursday they were preparing to end the protest and remove the more than 300 trucks, with the city’s interim police chief warning: “Action is imminent.”

The operation Friday in Ottawa began in the morning with police methodically arresting protesters a few blocks from Parliament Hill, the heart of protest zone, where trucks were parked shoulder to shoulder. Some officers carried automatic weapons and wore tactical unit uniforms.

Heavy tow trucks began to pull away a few of the big rigs.

Not long after the arrests began, at least one big rig pulled away near the front of Parliament.

But despite warnings to leave posted by police on social media, a few protesters danced in the streets to the Beastie Boys anthem ”(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (To Party!)” and Bob Marley’s “Get Up, Stand Up,” while shouting, “Freedom!”

The two protest leaders under arrest were due in court Friday. Among the charges: mischief and obstructing police.

The bumper-to-bumper occupation infuriated many Ottawa residents, who complained of being harassed and intimidated on the streets and obtained a court injunction to stop the truckers’ incessant honking of their horns.

The demonstrations around the country by protesters in trucks, tractors and motor homes initially focused on Canada’s vaccine requirement for truckers entering the country but soon morphed into a broad attack on COVID-19 precautions and Trudeau’s government.

The biggest border blockade, at the Ambassador Bridge between Windsor, Ontario, and Detroit, disrupted the flow of auto parts between the two countries and forced the industry to curtail production. Authorities lifted the siege last weekend after arresting dozens of protesters.

The final border blockade, in Manitoba, across from North Dakota, ended peacefully on Wednesday.

The protests have been cheered on and received donations from conservatives in the U.S.

___

Gillies reported from Toronto.

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’Freedom Convoy’ protest: Ottawa police presence grows, chief vows to “take back” Canadian capital

New fencing was erected on the Parliament Hill side of Wellington Street, next to the demonstrators’ encampments. The University of Ottawa moved academic activities online until Monday and said it planned to increase campus security.

As police continued to warn protesters that the encampments in downtown Ottawa are illegal, municipal law enforcement officials said that if protesters accompanied by animals in the encampments are unable to care for their pets because of police enforcement, the animal will be placed into protective care for eight days at the owner’s cost.

Police in Canada’s capital pledged to clamp down “in the coming days” on the self-styled “Freedom Convoy” protesters who have dug in despite warnings of arrests.

The blockades at the U.S.-Canada border crossings that disrupted traffic and trade have been cleared. But in Ottawa, demonstrators protesting vaccine mandates and the government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau continue to jam city streets.

Official urgency is growing to forestall a fourth weekend of raucous protests that authorities have called an illegal occupation.

“We are going to take back the entirety of the downtown core and every occupied space,” Ottawa Interim Police Chief Steve Bell told the city council late Wednesday.

Officers will enforce a plan to remove anyone who refuses to leave, Bell said. “You will be hearing and seeing these actions in the coming days.”

Police on Wednesday handed demonstrators fliers in English and French telling them to leave or face arrest. They warned that participants who are convicted of crimes could be barred from entering the United States. They handed out leaflets to protesters again Thursday morning.

“Today’s the day we are all under the impression we are going to get arrested,” said 23-year-old Justin Aiello. “We are okay with that, as it’s for a good cause. … We are going to have a good time in prison.”

Aiello, who drove in from Montreal 20 days ago, was sitting in the truck of his area’s “block captain,” who was out at an organizing meeting, he said. Nearby, a young man walked around with a walkie-talkie, part of a watch team to monitor who came into their area and prevent instigators from planting anything to make them look bad, Aiello said.

Dave Langille, 40, a farmer from Toronto, said police left him a ticket for 79 dollars, tucked beside a jerrycan on his vehicle, which has been illegally parked in Ottawa since Friday.

He said someone offered him several times the ticket’s price to buy it as memorabilia, but he declined, saying he wanted to keep it “as ammo” and planned to litigate it alongside other ticketed drivers to keep the government “in court for years.”

“Everybody’s already broke,” he said, rejecting the idea his actions were illegal.

Trudeau on Monday became the first Canadian leader to invoke the country’s Emergencies Act, giving authorities more power to regulate the protests and track their financing. The moves could set the stage for tougher action to quell the standoff gripping the city.

In a letter to the country’s provincial premiers, Trudeau wrote that “we are seeing activity that is a threat to our democracy and that is undermining the public’s trust in our institutions,” Canadian media reported.

He said his application of the law would be limited in time and targeted to specific locations. Some premiers and civil liberties advocates opposed the move.

Officials say the Emergencies Act gives police the authority to declare areas including Parliament and critical infrastructure off-limits for protests that “breach the peace.” Banks may freeze accounts without a court order, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police may enforce local laws and tow truck firms may be compelled to haul vehicles out.

Tow truck operators have been worried about the risks to their safety and future employment if the government asks them to remove the big rigs jamming downtown Ottawa, an industry leader told Canada’s public radio broadcaster Wednesday.

The country’s public safety minister warned of protester links to far-right groups. Police arrested 11 people and seized guns and ammunition Monday at a border blockade in Coutts, Alberta. Four people were charged with conspiracy to commit murder. Some protesters left the site after the arrests to avoid violence.

The fliers that police distributed in Ottawa did not seem to faze demonstrators Wednesday. They continued to blare horns and music; many vowed to stay until their demands were met. Those demands have ranged from the end of vaccine mandates and other public health restrictions to the removal of Trudeau and his government.

In a tearful video posted on social media, convoy organizer Tamara Lich indicated it was “inevitable at this point” that she would face arrest and possible prison time. But she urged people to join them in Ottawa.

“You have to know that they’re trying to provoke us. … Tomorrow is a new day, and I’m ready. I am not afraid, and we’re going to hold the line,” she said. “This has been a really crazy ride. … I just want you to stay strong,”

“I pray that you all find forgiveness in your hearts … even when we don’t understand it.”



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Ottawa Police Warn of Arrests as Government Gets Tougher on Protests

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The police handed out leaflets ordering protesters in Ottawa who had been blockading the streets of the Canadian capital to leave its downtown area or face criminal charges.CreditCredit…Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press, via Associated Press

The police on Wednesday ordered protesters clogging Ottawa’s streets to leave or face criminal charges, appearing to set the stage for a clampdown on the demonstrations that have roiled the nation’s capital for weeks.

“You must leave the area now,” the Ottawa Police Service said in a statement and in leaflets handed out to protesters. “Anyone blocking streets, or assisting others in the blocking streets, are committing a criminal offense and you may be arrested. You must immediately cease further unlawful activity or you will face charges.”

The police warned that anyone coming to Ottawa to join the demonstration would also be breaking the law.

This week, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made his most aggressive move yet, declaring a national emergency aimed at ending the demonstrations that began nearly three weeks ago in the capital of Ottawa to protest vaccine mandates, and have since spread across the country.

His invocation of the Emergencies Act conferred enormous, if temporary, power on the federal government — and was the first time in more than a half-century that a Canadian government had taken such a drastic step.

The police will now be able to seize trucks and other vehicles used in the protests. Demonstrations that “go beyond lawful protest” would be banned, the prime minister said, and the government would formally ban blockades in designated areas like border crossings, airports and the capital.

But Mr. Trudeau and members of his cabinet offered repeated assurance that the act would not be used to suspend “fundamental rights.”

After the leaflets were handed out to protesters in Ottawa, a group of them near Parliament Hill asked police officers if they were going to be arrested. “If you’re given the order will you follow orders?” one of the protesters asked. Officers responded that for now they were not making arrests.

Denis Brown, 57, who quit his job as a technology service provider because he didn’t want to get vaccinated for travel, was circulating his own message on a piece of paper: The politicians should be arrested, it said.

The patience of many Canadians with the protests has grown thinner by the day. The nation’s image of serenity and order has given way to scenes of truckers shouting “freedom,” honking horns, confronting police and, in some cases, taunting fellow citizens who wear masks.

Credit…Royal Canadian Mounted Police

While most of the protests have been peaceful, the presence of more hard-line elements was underlined this week when four protesters in Alberta on Tuesday were charged with conspiracy to murder police officers, in relation to what the police described as a plan to use violence if officers tried to break up a blockade in Coutts, a village in southern Alberta bordering Montana.

A stockpile of weapons — including 13 long guns, handguns, a machete, multiple sets of body armor, a large quantity of ammunition and magazines — was discovered by the police in trailers in Alberta on Monday. Police said a small protest cell in the province had been prepared to use force to maintain the now-disbanded blockade in Coutts.

Thirteen people were arrested, ranging in age from 18 to 62, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Alberta said in a statement on Tuesday. In addition to charging four with conspiracy to commit murder, the police charged most of the remaining protesters with possession of a weapon and with “mischief” over 5,000 Canadian dollars.

Marco Mendicini, the minister of public safety, said Wednesday that three of the main border crossings previously impeded by protesters — in Coutts, Alberta; Surrey, British Columbia; and the Ambassador Bridge linking Windsor, Ontario to Detroit — were now open. The Ambassador Bridge is a vital supply route for the global automobile industry.

“For those thinking of coming to Ottawa this weekend, don’t,” Mr. Mendicini said, warning that people who did so would be risking involvement in criminal actions.

Ottawa’s chief of police, Peter Sloly, resigned on Tuesday amid criticism that the police and Mr. Trudeau’s government have been ineffectual and sluggish in stemming the disruptions.

While trucks continue to snarl traffic and disrupt daily life in Ottawa, there have been signs in recent days that the protests and blockades appear to be slowly diminishing. The Ottawa police said on Tuesday afternoon that the number of trucks in the downtown core had shrunk to 360 vehicles compared with more than 400 vehicles earlier in the week while about 150 protesters remained on the streets.

Deputy Chief Patricia Ferguson said the police had so far opened 172 criminal investigations related to the protests, charged 33 people, and issued 3,000 tickets.

“This is not a peaceful protest,” Mr. Trudeau said this week. “The time to go home is now.”

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