Trudeau invokes emergency powers to starve protesting Canadian trucker
of funds
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[February 15, 2022]
By David Ljunggren and Steve Scherer
OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada is planning to impose
emergency measures not used for more than 50 years to cut off funding
for truckers responsible for nationwide protests that have gridlocked
the nation's capital for weeks.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday became only the second Canadian
leader in peacetime to invoke the Emergencies Act, which gives Ottawa
broad powers to end three weeks of protests across the country that have
hit cross-border trade, angered the United States and brought the center
of the capital to a halt.
"This illegal occupation needs to end ... the measure of success will
be, can we get our supply chains back? Can we end the disruption to
livelihoods of people who rely on trade to the United States?," Trudeau
told reporters.
Trudeau acted after concluding that law enforcement could not cope with
the protesters, especially in Ottawa, where police have largely stood
and watched truckers and demonstrators bring the city to a standstill.
As part of the Act, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland announced a slew
of measures to choke off the truckers' funding, saying they could lose
their commercial licenses, insurance and access to bank accounts.
"I suspect following the money and then turning the money off is
probably a good strategy and not one that's easily done ... temporary
short-term measures that wouldn't normally be acceptable can be put in
place," Jack Lindsay, department chair for applied disaster and
emergency studies at Brandon University in Manitoba.
"I imagine this will start of week full of political discourse over
whether the government overstepped or not."
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Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau takes part in a news
conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada February
14, 2022. REUTERS/Blair Gable/File Photo
Doug Ford, the premier of Ontario,
the most populous of the 10 provinces, said he backed Trudeau's
decision.
The last leader to invoke such measures was Trudeau's father,
Liberal Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, who clamped down in 1970
after a splinter group of militant Quebec separatists kidnapped a
provincial minister and a British diplomat.
But whereas he had broad support, four provinces opposed Monday's
move on the grounds they can cope with the protests.
Police in Alberta, one of the unhappy provinces, said on Monday they
had arrested 11 people and confiscated a large number of guns.
Members of the group had vowed to resist attempts to end a nearby
border blockade, authorities said.
The Canadian Civil Liberties Association came out against the
government's decision Monday, saying the standard for invoking the
Emergencies Act "has not been met."
The Act exists for situations that seriously threaten "the ability
of the Government of Canada to preserve the sovereignty, security
and territorial integrity of Canada" and that "cannot be effectively
dealt with under any other law of Canada," it said in a statement.
(Reporting by David Ljunggren; Additional reporting by Nichola
Saminather and Anna Mehler-Paperny; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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