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		Ottawa bracing for Canada Day anti-government protests
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		[July 01, 2022]  
		By Steve Scherer
 OTTAWA (Reuters) - The first in-person 
		Canada Day celebrations in three years on Friday will include a huge 
		police presence and street closures throughout downtown Ottawa to 
		prevent anti-government "freedom" protesters from disrupting the 
		festivities.
 
 Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the free concerts and other activities 
		usually held on the national holiday, which celebrates the founding of 
		the country, were last held in 2019.
 
 "This is a time to celebrate who we are and coming out of a two-year 
		pandemic," Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said on Wednesday, 
		encouraging people to take part in the festivities.
 
 "There may be some effort among a small minority to try and cause 
		disturbances or worse," he said.
 
 Several groups are planning marches and even a dance party to protest 
		coronavirus vaccination mandates, globalization and what they say is 
		government overreach in Canada.
 
 Some of the same organizers were behind a truck convoy that blocked 
		Ottawa's downtown core around parliament for three weeks this past 
		winter, causing a crisis that resulted in dozens of arrests. Separate 
		protests during the same period snarled international travel and trade 
		at border crossings.
 
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			James Topp, a Canadian Forces veteran who marched across Canada 
			protesting against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccines 
			mandates, walks to the National War Memorial with supporters ahead 
			of Canada Day in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, June 30, 2022. 
			REUTERS/Patrick Doyle 
            
			
			 
            Earlier this week, Ottawa's interim Police Chief 
			Steve Bell said he expected hundreds of thousands of people to 
			participate in the city's celebrations, but he did not know how many 
			people planned on joining the protests.
 James Topp, a former soldier and one of the organizers, has said 
			that the protests will be peaceful.
 
 To keep vehicles from blocking the streets, most of the downtown 
			core will be closed to traffic, and officials are encouraging people 
			to take free public transit instead of driving. The celebrations 
			will start in the morning and end with concerts and fireworks in the 
			evening.
 
 Multiple police forces, including the Royal Canadian Mounted Police 
			(RCMP), are being brought in to help. The city recently raised fines 
			to C$1,000 ($850) for certain violations including "unusual noise" - 
			like the blaring of vehicle horns - and blocking a highway.
 
 (Reporting by Steve Scherer; Editing by Josie Kao)
 
            
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