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Canadian govt outlines steps to end truckers protests

Police will soon establish “no-go” zones in the city’s downtown core, the minister said, and people who defy orders to leave will face fines or jail time, or both….reports Asian Lite News

One day after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau declared a public order emergency, the government has outlined further steps to end the truckers protests and blockades.

According to a press release issued by Public Safety Canada on Tuesday, anyone participating in the blockades is urged to return to their communities peacefully and immediately.

“These blockades must be brought to an end, and the federal government will continue working on every option to end them,” the release said.

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said on Tuesday in a press conference that they would like to see the 19-day occupation end this week, assuring Ottawa residents that the chaos in their city will soon end.

“No one wants to see another weekend like the last three. And I’m assured by my discussions with the police that they fully appreciate that, and we now depend on them to do the job,” Mendicino said.

Police will soon establish “no-go” zones in the city’s downtown core, the minister said, and people who defy orders to leave will face fines or jail time, or both.

Mendicino said authorities will erect more concrete barriers and press private tow truck companies into removing the big trucks that have clogged Ottawa’s streets.

Ottawa’s police chief, Peter Sloly, unexpectedly resigned on Tuesday. Ottawa Police Services Board Chair Diane Beans confirmed in a press conference that Sloly and Ottawa Police Service had reached a “mutually agreeable separation” and Sloly is no longer employed there.

Canada truck protests

Going forward, Ottawa Police Service’s priority remains finding a peaceful end to the occupation of the city, Beans said. The board has named Deputy Chief Steve Bell temporary head of the force until a permanent replacement is found.

Canada’s banks were also waiting for further instructions on how they’re supposed to enforce the government’s orders, local media reported.

Sue-Ling Yip, a partner with global audit and consultancy firm KPMG in Canada’s Risk Consulting practice, was quoted as saying that communication between the government and the banks will be key in implementing the order correctly and the government may also need to allow the banks time to make the appropriate operational changes.

“It doesn’t happen overnight,” she said, “We have to be mindful that it’s not something that banks can snap their fingers and make it happen. There’s a lot of work involved.”

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said Monday that banks would be required to report relationships with people involved in blockades and would be given the authority to freeze accounts without a court order.

Crowdfunding platforms and payment service providers must report large and suspicious transactions to the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, the national financial intelligence agency, added Freeland.

Thousands of Canadian truckers and their supporters have gathered in Ottawa since late January to oppose the Canadian government’s vaccine requirement for truckers crossing the border into the US.

The protesters have blocked Ottawa’s downtown core and impeded border crossings between Canada and the US.

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Dozens more graves found near indigenous school in Canada

Indigenous investigations across the country have found evidence of more than 1,100 graves since last spring….reports Asian Lite News

An indigenous community in Canada on Tuesday said that it has discovered evidence of 54 unmarked graves at the sites of two former residential schools in Saskatchewan.

Keeseekoose First Nation said the graves were found near Fort Pelly and St Phillip’s residential schools, the BBC reported.

It is the latest finding amid a wave that has triggered a national debate over the residential school system. This has also added to a growing tally of such burials that shocked the nation last year.

The two schools were run by the Catholic Church on behalf of the federal government — St Phillip’s from 1905 to 1913 and Fort Pelly from 1928 to 1969.

Indigenous investigations across the country have found evidence of more than 1,100 graves since last spring.

Just weeks ago, the Williams Lake First Nation announced it had found evidence of 93 unmarked graves on the grounds of St Joseph Mission, a former residential school.

These government-funded compulsory boarding schools were part of a policy meant to assimilate indigenous children and destroy indigenous cultures and languages.

Ted Quewezance, project leader of the Keeseekoose’s search, said ground-penetrating radar technology suggested there were 42 grave sites at the grounds of Fort Pelly Residential School, and an additional 12 at St Phillip’s, the BBC reported.

At a news conference on Tuesday, Quewezance said the discovery matched testimony of residential school survivors.

Under the Canadian schooling system for indigenous children during the 19th century, at least 150,000 students were forcibly separated from their families and incarcerated in residential schools. It is estimated that up to 6,000 children could have died in such schools.

Many of the indigenous children in Canada were subjected to physical and sexual abuse at the schools, which barred them from practising their traditions and speaking their languages, reported Washington Post last year citing a 2015 report by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

It said the schools carried out “cultural genocide” and effectively institutionalised child neglect.

Children often died of diseases that spread rapidly in unsanitary living conditions, in accidents and in fires, the commission said. Some disappeared while trying to escape.

Meanwhile, the Cowessess First Nation had long suspected there were many unmarked graves at the site, which is about 87 miles east of Regina, the capital of Saskatchewan.

The Marieval Indian Residential School was founded in the 1890s by Catholic missionaries. The federal government began funding the school in 1901 and took over its administration in 1969 before turning it over to the Cowessess First Nation in 1987. It was closed in the 1990s. (with inputs from ANI)

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Trudeau invokes emergency powers to crush protests

The act will be used to protect critical infrastructure such as borders and airports from the blockades and the government will enable the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to enforce municipal bylaws…reports Asian Lite News

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday declared a public order emergency to support provinces in ending the ongoing blockades caused by truck convoy protests.

Trudeau said in a press conference that he invoked the Emergencies Act for the first time in Canada’s history to give the federal government extra and “temporary” powers to handle the issue, adding the move targets to those areas in need, not the whole country, Xinhua news agency reported.

The act will be used to protect critical infrastructure such as borders and airports from the blockades and the government will enable the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to enforce municipal bylaws, Trudeau said, dismissing the involvement of military force.

The measures also include giving banks the power to suspend or freeze accounts of blockade supporters without a court order, and force crowdfunding platforms and cryptocurrencies to follow anti-money laundering and terrorist financing laws.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said at the same event that companies with trucks involved in the illegal blockades will have their corporate bank accounts frozen, and their insurance suspended.

The Emergencies Act, which replaced the War Measures Act in the 1980s, provides special powers to respond to emergency scenarios affecting public welfare (natural disasters, disease outbreaks), public order (civil unrest), and international emergencies or war emergencies.

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Windsor police arrest protesters blocking US-Canada bridge

The nearly weeklong standoff at the bridge, which links Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, has paralyzed traffic between the US and Canada and crippled a key trade route for both countries….reports Asian Lite News

Windsor police have started arresting protesters blocking the Ambassador Bridge, the busiest land border crossing between US and Canada.

Up to 30 protesters have been arrested near the Ambassador Bridge, most of whom were charged with “criminal mischief,” Windsor Police Chief Pamela Mizuno told reporters on Sunday (local time) afternoon, reported CNN.

Windsor police also seized five vehicles from protesters Sunday, Mizuno said, and seven vehicles were towed on Saturday.

The police chief did not provide a timeline for when the bridge was expected to reopen but said police were focusing on restoring traffic flow in the area and would open it as soon as they could.

“From the onset of the demonstration, our goal was to resolve this situation safely and peacefully,” Mizuno said, adding “while police officers are authorized by law to use force, at this time I’m not aware of any injuries as a result of any police interaction that has occurred since the onset of the protest.”

Police expect to have a heightened presence in the region to maintain order, the chief said.

Protesters decrying COVID-19 mandates were still blocking border crossing in North America. The police crackdown could soon restore some normalcy to American and Canadian businesses hit hard by a blockade at the border, reported CNN.

The nearly weeklong standoff at the bridge, which links Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, has paralyzed traffic between the US and Canada and crippled a key trade route for both countries.

Now, those refusing to budge will face severe consequences, the leader of Ontario province said.

Canada truck protests

“Let me be crystal clear: it is illegal and punishable to block and impede the movement of goods, people and services along with critical infrastructure,” Ontario Premier Doug Ford tweeted Sunday.

“Fines for non-compliance will be severe, with a maximum penalty of USD 100,000 and up to a year imprisonment.”

The protests stemmed from truckers opposing Canada’s new mandate requiring them to either be fully vaccinated when crossing the Canadian-US border or face a two-week quarantine.

Their “Freedom Convoy” has since drawn supporters resisting other COVID-19 prevention measures, including mask mandates, lockdowns and restrictions on gatherings. (ANI)

ALSO READ: Canada ramps up clampdown on trucker protests

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Canada ramps up clampdown on trucker protests

The Ontario Superior Court followed up with an injunction against the protests on Friday night, giving participants until 7 p.m. to clear out….reports Asian Lite News

 Canadian police have stepped up enforcement to end the ongoing anti-Covid truckers’ protests, especially in Windsor, the Canada-US border city and Ottawa, the national capital.

Windsor Police tweeted on Saturday that they had started enforcement actions against protesters opposing Covid-19 restrictions who blocked access to the Ambassador Bridge for most of the week, reports Xinhua news agency.

“The Windsor Police & its policing partners have commenced enforcement at and near the Ambassador Bridge. We urge all demonstrators to act lawfully & peacefully. Commuters are still being asked to avoid the areas affected by the demonstrations at this time,” the tweet said.

Ontario province, where Ottawa is located, on Friday declared a state of emergency to quell convoy protests, and it is now illegal and punishable to block and impede the movement of goods, people and services along critical infrastructure, including international border crossings, major highways, airports, ports, bridges and railways.

The Ontario Superior Court followed up with an injunction against the protests on Friday night, giving participants until 7 p.m. to clear out.

That deadline was largely ignored. Police were maintaining a heavy presence at the entrance to the bridge, a key trade border crossing between Canada and the US where protesters brought traffic to a standstill, local media reported.

In downtown Ottawa, police said over 4,000 demonstrators were present throughout the day.

In a statement released on Saturday evening, police announced the establishment of an enhanced, Integrated Command Centre (ICC) in response to a significant influx of demonstrators into the Ottawa area and an escalation of the current occupation.

“We expect that the ICC will result in a significantly enhanced ability of our police service to respond to the current situation in our city. The ICC will allow us to make the most effective use of the additional resources our policing partners have provided to us,” the statement said.

On Saturday afternoon, Ottawa Police had released another statement, saying that they deployed all available officers on Friday night as protesters in the city “exhibited aggressive behaviour,” including overwhelming officers and subverting law enforcement efforts.

Canada truck protests

The police said 28 arrests have been made while 140 criminal investigations are underway, with officers collecting various information to assist prosecuting offenders.

Another 2,600 tickets have been issued by bylaw officers in relation to what they call an “illegal occupation”, according to the statement.

Thousands of Canadian truckers and their supporters descended on Ottawa in late January to oppose the Canadian government’s vaccine requirement for truckers crossing the border into the US, which has the same policy.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Friday the protesters need to understand “it’s time to go home”. However, the convoy protests and demonstrations continue nationwide.

In Toronto, the largest city in Canada, more than 1,000 people gathered at Queen’s Park near the Ontario legislature on Saturday to protest vaccine mandates and other Covid-19 public health restrictions.

Protesters were seen holding Canadian flags and signs reading “freedom”.

Meanwhile in British Columbia, hundreds of protesters gathered at the intersection outside the Canada-US border crossing in Surrey to demonstrate against Covid-19-related health measures and to support the truckers’ “Freedom Convoy” protests.

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Canada’s population growing at fastest rate in G7

Statistics Canada said the Covid-19 pandemic not only slowed the arrival of immigrants from other lands and may also have impacted fertility rates….reports Asian Lite News

Canada’s population grew at nearly twice the rate of any other G7 country from 2016 to 2021, rising by 5.2 per cent from 2016 to nearly 37 million in 2021, Statistics Canada has said.

Statistics Canada on Wednesday released the first results from the 2021 census, including the number of Canadians counted and the population growth, and it will in the coming months publish the full results from the census conducted every five years, Xinhua news agency reported.

According to the results, around 80 per cent of Canada’s population growth was due to immigration and 20 per cent to natural increase, which means the natural increase fell from 0.3 to 0.1 per cent, the lowest level on record. Despite the decline, the government agency added that the country is expected to maintain a positive natural increase for the next 50 years.

Statistics Canada said the Covid-19 pandemic not only slowed the arrival of immigrants from other lands and may also have impacted fertility rates.

A recent study suggested that one-fifth of Canadian adults under the age of 50 years wanted to have fewer children than previously planned or delayed having children as a result of the pandemic. Prior to the pandemic, fertility in Canada had been decreasing since 2015 and hit a record low of 1.4 children per woman in 2020, according to the government agency.

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US keeps close watch on Canada trucker protests

The ongoing protests in Ottawa have paralysed parts of the Canadian capital over the past two weeks, as truckers honked in anger over Covid-19 vaccine mandates….reports Asian Lite News

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said that the US government is watching the protests staged by truckers in Canada “very closely”.

Speaking to reporters during a daily briefing, Psaki expressed concern over a trucker blockade at the Ambassador Bridge, Canada’s busiest link to the US accounting for roughly a quarter of trade between the two countries, reports Xinhua news agency.

“The blockade poses a risk to supply chains for the auto industry because the bridge is a key conduit for motor vehicles, components, and parts; and delays risk disrupting auto production,” she said, adding that they are also “tracking potential disruptions to US agricultural exports from Michigan into Canada”.

U.S. President Joe Biden walks out from the White House in Washington, D.C., the United States, on Jan. 11, 2022. (Photo by Ting Shen_Xinhua_IANS)

The ongoing protests in Ottawa have paralysed parts of the Canadian capital over the past two weeks, as truckers honked in anger over Covid-19 vaccine mandates.

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson declared a state of emergency on Sunday, saying the situation was “completely out of control”.

The US Department of Homeland Security has reportedly warned law enforcement across the country that similar protests could soon begin here.

A bulletin issued on Tuesday by the Department to state and local officials said that the agency “has received reports of truck drivers planning to potentially block roads in major metropolitan cities in the US in protest of, among other things, vaccine mandates for truck drivers”.

“While there are currently no indications of planned violence, if hundreds of trucks converge in a major metropolitan city, the potential exists to severely disrupt transportation, federal government operations, commercial facilities, and emergency services through gridlock and potential counter-protests.”

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Canada’s Jagmeet Singh condemns truck convoy

Contrary to his present stand on disruption, Singh had supported protests by a section of farmers in India and called on Trudeau to condemn the violence in India….reports Asian Lite News

Jagmeet Singh, the Sikh-origin leader of Canada’s New Democratic Party (NDP) who is now condemning a truckers strike in Ottawa, had staunchly supported the farmers protests in India last year.

Late last month, Singh condemned a convoy of truckers and others travelling to Ottawa to protest a federal rule requiring that all cross-border drivers be vaccinated against Covid-19, CBC News reported.

Singh said some of the people behind the demonstration are pushing “false information” through “inflammatory, divisive and hateful comments”.

The NDP leader said he doesn’t support a campaign that harbours “extremist and dangerous views” and “unequivocally” disapproves of his brother-in-law’s decision to donate, the report said.

The protest is being organised by Canada Unity, a group that opposes Covid-19-related measures.

Its organisers say it is intended to push Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his government to drop the vaccine mandate for truckers and do away with other public health protections.

Contrary to his present stand on disruption, Singh had supported protests by a section of farmers in India and called on Trudeau to condemn the violence in India.

“I am deeply concerned about the violence against farmers in India Those calling to harm farmers must be held accountable and the right to peaceful protest must be protected I am calling on Justin Trudeau to condemn the violence, immediately,” Singh had said in a tweet in January last year.

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Canadian capital in ‘chaos’

The protesters have since gathered in downtown Ottawa near Parliament Hill, and their demands have grown to include ending all such mandates nationwide …reports Asian Lite News

The mayor of Canada’s capital Ottawa has declared a state of emergency in response to more than a week of truckers’ protests against Covid restrictions, BBC reported.

Jim Watson said the city was “completely out of control”, with demonstrators outnumbering police.

He said the protests posed a threat to residents’ safety. There have also been reports of racial attacks. Ottawa’s centre has been paralysed, with vehicles and tents blocking roads, the report said.

The “Freedom Convoy” was sparked by the introduction last month of a new rule that all truckers must be vaccinated to cross the US-Canada border, but the protests have morphed into broader challenges to Covid health restrictions.

The protesters have since gathered in downtown Ottawa near Parliament Hill, and their demands have grown to include ending all such mandates nationwide and opposing the government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Speaking to Canadian radio station CFRA, Mr Watson said the protesters were behaving increasingly “insensitively” by continuously “blaring horns and sirens, [setting off] fireworks and turning it into a party”.

“Clearly, we are outnumbered and we are losing this battle,” he said, adding: “This has to be reversed – we have to get our city back.”

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Emergency in Canadian capital

On Saturday, about 5,000 people and 1,000 tractor-trailers and personal vehicles squeezed into downtown Ottawa to join in on the second week of a protest…reports Asian Lite News

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson declared a state of emergency to deal with a nine-day protest that has disrupted the core of the Canadian capital against the government’s Covid-19 vaccine mandate.

The declaration “reflects the serious danger and threat to the safety and security of residents posed by the ongoing demonstrations and highlights the need for support from other jurisdictions and levels of government”, said a statement issued on Sunday by the city.

Peter Sloly, the chief of the Ottawa Police Service, told a special meeting of the police board that his force does not “have sufficient resources to adequately and effectively address this situation while adequately and effectively providing policing in this city”, reports Xinhua news agency

Watson said that the thousands of protesters “are calling the shots” and have made the situation, where trucks have clogged residential streets and have kept their horns honking well into the night, “out of control”.

“They have far more people than we have police officers and I’ve indicated to the chief that we have to be much more nimble and proactive when it comes to these activities,” the Mayor told an Ottawa radio station.

On Saturday, about 5,000 people and 1,000 tractor-trailers and personal vehicles squeezed into downtown Ottawa to join in on the second week of a protest, which was initially intended to voice opposition to the Justin Trudeau-led government’s vaccine requirement for truckers crossing the Canada-US border.

Over the past week, the protest morphed into an occupation, and this weekend, Sloly characterized it as a “siege”, while a city councillor called it an act of “terrorism”, following reports of protesters involved in assaults and acts of vandalism.

Police have made a few arrests and issued more than 450 tickets.

But Ottawa residents want tougher action taken and have called on Prime Minister Trudeau to take action.

One major ask he has declined to agree to, thus far, is calling on the Canadian Armed Forces to disperse the crowds and their vehicles.

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