More demonstrators poured onto the streets
of Ottawa and other Canadian cities on Saturday demanding an end to Covid
vaccine mandates, as protests against pandemic restrictions entered their
second week.
In the capital, demonstrators huddled around campfires in bone-chilling
temperatures and erected portable saunas and bouncy castles for kids outside
Parliament, while waving Canadian flags and shouting anti-government slogans.
Their chants of “freedom” were met with cries of “go home” by a smaller
group of counter-protestors fed up with the week-long occupation of the
capital.
The atmosphere, however, appeared more festive — with dancing and
fireworks — than a week earlier, when several protesters waved Confederate
flags and Nazi symbols and clashed with locals.
The demonstrations, which started out as protests by truckers angry with
vaccine requirements when crossing the US-Canadian border, have morphed into
broader protests against Covid health restrictions.
Police were out in force and put up barriers to limit vehicle access to the
city center, as many thousands of protestors — including two on horseback —
joined truckers already jamming Ottawa streets.
Similar protests were happening in almost every major Canadian city,
including Toronto — where a man was charged with assault after throwing a
smoke bomb into a crowd.
In Winnipeg, a driver was arrested for slamming his SUV into demonstrators.
Four people were treated for minor injuries, police said.
And in southern Alberta province, truckers continued to block a major
border crossing to the US state of Montana.
– ‘Nationwide insurrection’ –
At an emergency meeting late Saturday, Ottawa police chief Peter Sloly
requested “an additional surge of resources” to bring an end to what police
board chair Diane Deans described as a “siege” of the capital.
“This group is a threat to our democracy,” Deans said. “What we’re seeing
is bigger than just a city of Ottawa problem, this is a nationwide
insurrection. This is madness.”
With public anger rising — thousands of residents have complained of
harassment by protesters, and an online petition demanding action has drawn
40,000 signatures — Sloly has faced increased pressure to end what he has
called an “unlawful” occupation of the city.
Reached for comment by AFP, protest coordinator Jim Torma said the
protesters would not back down.
“They’re not going to hide us,” Torma said. “We’re going to be in
(politicians’) faces as long as it takes” to force an end to public health
restrictions aimed at slowing the spread of Covid-19.
Kimberly Ball, who with her husband drove five hours from a small town west
of Toronto to join the Ottawa protest, told AFP, “It’s about our freedom.”
Holding back tears, she said, “A couple of people we know, friends, lost
their jobs because of these (vaccine) mandates” and her own parents have
disowned her for not getting a jab.
Ball has had Covid and said she questions whether the vaccines are safe and
effective.
She is, however, in the minority in Canada, where 90 percent of adults are
fully vaccinated.
– A ‘fringe minority’? –
The Freedom Convoy started on Canada’s Pacific coast in late January and
picked up supporters along the long trek to the capital — as well as
millions of dollars in an online fundraiser that GoFundMe cancelled late
Friday after receiving reports of “violence and unlawful activity.”
The number of protesters in Ottawa had peaked last Saturday at several
thousand before dwindling to a few hundred by midweek, officials said.
They received support from tech magnate Elon Musk and former US president
Donald Trump, who in a statement Friday called Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
a “far left lunatic” for imposing “insane Covid mandates.”
Trudeau has said the protesters represent only a “fringe minority,” though
polls show one-third of Canadians support the call to lift all Covid
restrictions. Vaccine mandates for travelers are set by the federal
government, but most other Covid measures are the responsibility of
provincial authorities in Canada.
Following a backlash, Quebec last month walked back plans for a health tax
on unvaccinated residents, while Saskatchewan this week announced an imminent
lifting of all pandemic restrictions, despite pushback from doctors.
“What’s necessary is your freedom,” Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe said in
a video address. “What’s necessary is getting your life back to normal.”
Ottawa residents, meanwhile, have had enough of the chaos the protests have
brought to their streets and launched a class action seeking almost 10
million Canadian dollars (US$8 million) from organizers.
“The truckers have been terrorizing us for seven, eight days now,”
university student Saffron Binder told AFP. “The occupation must end.”