Ottawa police have begun arresting protesters encamped in the downtown core, less than two hours after the city’s interim police chief warned that action to remove "Freedom Convoy" demonstrators from the area was "imminent."
Large numbers of police officers in yellow vests have been seen downtown handing leaflets to protesters, warning them to leave or risk being arrested. Video appeared to show the arrest of one of the convoy’s organizers, Chris Barber, but police have not confirmed the man’s identity.
Interim Ottawa Police Chief Steve Bell warned Thursday afternoon that action to remove ‘Freedom Convoy’ demonstrators from the city’s downtown core was "imminent."
Speaking at a press conference, Bell, who replaced former police chief Peter Sloly this week following his resignation, urged protesters to leave the downtown area.
"We want to end this unlawful protest peacefully and safely," Bell said.
Bell said police from different parts of Ontario and Quebec have joined Ottawa officers and they are "absolutely committed" to ending the protest.
Workers have installed new fencing around Parliament to harden the perimeter and police say actions to remove demonstrators and move vehicles that have now been blocking city streets for nearly three weeks will happen over the next couple days.
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Protesters have camped out since the end of January on Wellington Street, where Parliament is located, and in surrounding neighbourhoods to protest COVID-19 vaccine mandates and pandemic restrictions. In spite of recent court injunctions that were obtained to silence truck horns downtown, many continued to blare their horns.
The city is now preparing for its fourth straight weekend of demonstrations, just as Environment Canada warns of a winter storm in the Ottawa area, with between 20 and 30 centimetres of snow expected by Friday morning.
However, Bell maintained that the upcoming weekend in Ottawa would not look like previous ones.
Bell said Thursday there will be a secure area with over 100 checkpoints to make sure only those working and living in the downtown core will be allowed in, as well as those with a "lawful reason" to be in the area, such as for a medical appointment.
Bell, who replaced former police chief Peter Sloly this week following his resignation, added that if protesters want to leave on their own terms, "now is the time" to do so.
The Ontario Provincial Police and RCMP are currently aiding Ottawa police through a newly established integrated command centre, xjmtzywand a spokesperson for Quebec’s public security minister confirmed that provincial police are heading to Gatineau to provide further aid.
The latest warnings from Ottawa police come following the federal government’s invocation of the Emergencies Act on Monday, marking the first time it has been used since becoming law in 1988.
Police say under the act, anyone coming to Ottawa to join the protests is breaking the law. However, many demonstrators refuse to leave even under the threat of losing their commercial licences or having their vehicles seized.
The Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa urged parents on Wednesday to make "necessary alternate care arrangements" should they be separated from their children due to police actions as the Emergencies Act prohibits children from participating in the protests. Ottawa police have repeatedly mentioned the 100 or so children living in the trucks parked outside of Parliament Hill.
The city’s bylaw service also warned protesters that their animals will be "relinquished" after eight days if a person is unable to care for them due to police actions.
Meanwhile, a proposed class-action lawsuit on behalf of Ottawa residents has been expanded to include some businesses as plaintiffs, and is now seeking $306 million from not only truckers but donors and others.
HOUSE DEBATES EMERGENCIES ACT
The House of Commons began debating the government’s use of the Emergencies Act on Thursday, with MPs set to work through the weekend before voting on Monday.
While the additional powers granted by the act are in effect, including a ban on public assemblies deemed to be unlawful and the ability to freeze protesters’ bank accounts without a court order, the House and Senate must confirm the decision to use the legislation.
The Conservatives and Bloc Quebecois have said they will not support the motion, while NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says his caucus supports the use of the Emergencies Act, but only cautiously and with restraint.
Some protesters have called for the ouster of the Liberal government, even offering to work with opposition parties to make that happen. None of the opposition parties have shown any sign that they might consider this offer.
Police, members of the federal government and other officials have commonly referred to the protests as an unlawful "occupation."
Despite criticism over the need to invoke the Emergencies Act, including from some premiers, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau maintains that the federal government is not limiting freedom of expression or the right to peacefully protest, but is rather reinforcing values and institutions that keep Canadians safe.
The Canadian Civil Liberties Association has also criticized the move and is seeking a judicial review of the government’s decision to invoke the Emergencies Act.
The group said in a statement that it believes the measures are unconstitutional and will be asking the courts to step in to defend the rule of law and the constitutional rights of all Canadians across the country.
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Speaking in the House of Commons on Thursday, Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino called the protests illegal and said Ottawa residents have been "terrorized," including those at an apartment building that was the site of an attempted arson.
Mendicino confirmed the blockades in Coutts, Alta., Surrey, B.C., Windsor, Ont. and Emerson, Man. have all been resolved, and an effort to revive a protest at the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor was thwarted.
However, a small group of protesters continues to demonstrate outside of the Manitoba legislature in Winnipeg, and another protest is scheduled for this weekend in Quebec City.
BANKS TAKE ACTION TO CEASE FINANCING
During a news conference Thursday, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said the RCMP has shared the names of individuals, businesses and crypto wallets associated with the protests with banks and accounts have been frozen.
Although she wouldn’t confirm how many accounts have been frozen, saying she did not want to "jeopardize" the work of law enforcement, Freeland told reporters that those details will be disclosed in "due course and soon."
"These measures are real, they are being used, they will have an impact and there is a really easy way to avoid being affected by these measures, and that is just go home, go back to work," she said.
As part of the emergency order, the federal government is broadening anti-money laundering and terrorist financing rules to cover crowdfunding platforms and their payment services.
Those companies are being required to register with FINTRAC, or the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, and report large and suspicious transactions. Financial institutions also will be able to report anyone believed to be involved in the blockades to the RCMP or Canadian Security Intelligence Service.
The federal government plans to put forward legislation to make the FINTRAC rules permanent.
RELATED IMAGESview larger image
Crews secure fencing to shore up the existing gates along Wellington Street on Parliament Hill, on the 21st day of a protest against COVID-19 measures that has grown into a broader anti-government protest, in Ottawa, on Feb. 17, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang
Police hand out a notice to protesters on the 21st day of a protest against COVID-19 measures that has grown into a broader anti-government protest, in Ottawa, on Feb. 17, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang
An Ontario Provincial Police vehicle is parked at the ongoing trucker blockade protest in Ottawa, Feb. 17, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld