Trucker convoy seeks to enter Washington but police block access to most
demonstrators
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[March 15, 2022]
By Jim Bourg
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A convoy of trucks
attempted to bring a weeks-long, cross-country protest against COVID-19
mandates into Washington, D.C., on Monday, but police blocked numerous
bridges, highway exits and city streets, preventing many of the vehicles
from entering the heart of the nation's capital.
It was the first time the protesters sought to enter the city since the
convoy arrived in the area earlier this month. The procession started
out in California in February.
Before Monday, the trucks, which were joined by protesters in cars and
recreational vehicles, remained on the Beltway, a 64-mile (103 km)
highway that encircles the city, driving slowly to draw attention to
their cause.
Officials on Monday warned of traffic delays on three major interstates
in the capital region due to the closures.
A traffic camera mounted near the 14th Street Bridge over the Potomac
River showed dozens of big rigs backed up on Interstate 395 near the
Pentagon as police denied access. Many of the drivers were blaring their
air horns as traffic snarled.
While many trucks were blocked, some apparently made it into the city,
according to live streams posted on social media.
Leaders of the convoy, inspired by demonstrations last month that
paralyzed Canada's capital city of Ottawa, are calling for an end to all
pandemic-related restrictions. The movement attracted participants from
around the country who were angry about vaccination requirements for
health, government and military employees.
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Vehicles, including 18-wheeler trucks, RVs and other cars drive
towards Washington, D.C., after some of them arrived as part of a
convoy that traveled across the country, to protest coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) related mandates and other issues, in Hagerstown,
Maryland, U.S., March 6, 2022. REUTERS/Stephanie Keith/File Photo
It has also drawn support from
Republicans such as U.S. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas and Senator Ron
Johnson of Wisconsin.
The protest against vaccine requirements and other
pandemic restrictions has been undercut in recent weeks, with many
U.S. cities rolling back mask mandates and other measures as
infections and hospitalizations decline sharply.
Before drivers made the roughly 80-mile trip to Washington on Monday
morning, hundreds of vehicles gathered at the Hagerstown Speedway
racetrack in Maryland.
The group had planned to stage a protest on Washington's National
Mall but it withdrew its application for a permit when the National
Park Service would not grant its requested dates, according to the
Washington Post.
A representative of the National Park Service did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
(Reporting by Tyler Clifford in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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