Canadian
authorities scramble to end anti-vaccine mandate protests
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[February 09, 2022]
By Ismail Shakil and Anna Mehler Paperny
(Reuters) - Canadian authorities are
scrambling to find ways to end the 12-day-long occupation of the
national capital's downtown, hoping a combination of criminal charges,
traffic tickets and the prospect of losing access to fuel will end the
blockades.
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The number of protesters in Ottawa against public health measures to
fight COVID-19 is dropping, police say, in the face of tougher
policing and a 10-day injunction to silence honking - something
residents say kept them up at night with incessant noise.
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But many of the remaining demonstrators in Ottawa were highly
"determined and volatile," deputy police chief Steve Bell said on
Tuesday.
Touted at first as a "Freedom Convoy" opposing a
vaccinate-or-quarantine mandate for cross-border truckers mirrored
by the U.S. government, the protest is about much more.
Demonstrators have aired a litany of grievances encompassing
COVID-19 health measures, a carbon tax and other legislation.
The protests have spread to other cities, and late Monday
demonstrators blocked the Ambassador Bridge linking Canada and the
United States, one of the busiest border crossings on the continent,
for nearly a full day.
Protesters say they are peaceful but some waved Confederate Flags
and Swastikas in the occupation's early days. Some Ottawa residents
have said they were attacked and harassed. Criminal investigations
are under way into, among other things, an attempted arson at a
downtown apartment building.
Police have arrested 23 people and issued more than 1,300 tickets.
Police came under fire for their initially permissive attitude
toward the blockade but began trying to take back control Sunday
night with the seizure of thousands of liters of fuel and the
removal of an oil tanker truck.
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They have received additional officers from the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the Ontario
Provincial Police and others. On Tuesday, police
said more reinforcements were needed - both
officers and people with legal expertise in
insurance and licensing, suggesting intentions
to pursue enforcement through commercial vehicle
licences.
Canadians have largely followed government's
health measures, with nearly 79% of the eligible
population inoculated with two doses of a
COVID-19 vaccine. A recent poll found 62% of
Canadians surveyed oppose the "Freedom Convoy".
Some provinces, including the two most populous
provinces of Ontario and Quebec, have started
lifting their COVID-19 restrictions that were
put in place to combat the highly transmissible
Omicron variant that emerged late last year.
(Reporting by Ismail Shakil in Bengaluru and
Anna Mehler Paperny in Ottawa; Editing by
Lincoln Feast.)
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