BSS
  17 Feb 2022, 09:19

Police issue ultimatum to protesters to leave Canada capital

OTTAWA, Feb 17, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Canadian police issued an ultimatum
Wednesday to protesters who've been choking Ottawa streets for 20 days to
leave the capital, as provincial and US state leaders called for an end to
the cross-border vaccine requirement that sparked the trucker-led movement.

  Officials, meanwhile, announced a negotiated peaceful end to the last of
several recent blockades by protesters of border crossings between Canada and
the United States.

  "You must leave the area now," Ottawa police said in a notice distributed
to truckers outside parliament.

  Anyone blocking streets or assisting others in doing so will be arrested
and face charges, as well as fines and seizures of their trucks, the
statement said.

  Police also warned that anyone charged or convicted for taking part in the
illegal demonstration may, in addition to criminal penalties, be barred from
traveling to the United States.

  As the notices were handed out, AFP journalists saw hundreds of trucks
continuing to occupy streets in the parliamentary precinct, blaring horns --
despite an extension Wednesday of a court order against the deafening noises,
obtained by an area resident fed up with the disruptions.

  "We're still a lot of trucks holding the line," trucker David Shaw, 65,
told AFP. If arrested, he added: "I'll keep coming back."

  Fellow protester Jan Grouin, 42, decried Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's
decision earlier this week to impose a state of emergency, calling it "a
little overreacting maybe to think that we are terrorists."

  In a statement, Ottawa interim police Chief Steve Bell said "a methodical
and well-resourced plan" would be carried out over the coming days "to take
back the entirety of the downtown core and every occupied space."

  "Some of the techniques we are lawfully able and prepared to use are not
what we are used to seeing in Ottawa," he said. "But we are prepared to use
them... to restore order."

  Montana Governor Greg Gianforte, meanwhile, asked Canadian and US leaders
in a letter signed by 16 US governors -- all members of the Republican party
-- to exempt truckers from vaccine and quarantine requirements when crossing
the Canada-US border. They were joined by Alberta Premier Jason Kenney and
Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, who has endorsed the truckers' convoy.

  "The timing of your decision to terminate the vaccine and quarantine
exemptions could not have been worse, as North America already faces grave
supply chain constraints," said the letter addressed to US President Joe
Biden and Trudeau.

  "These constraints, combined with increasing inflation, place significant
burdens on the residents of Canada and the United States."

  - 'Time for this to end' -

  Unable to dislodge the protesters, Trudeau this week invoked the
Emergencies Act, which gives the government wide new powers to end the
demonstrations over Covid restrictions. The move marked only the second time
in Canadian history such emergency powers have been invoked in peacetime.

  Trudeau told reporters Wednesday that with police now getting help from
various other law enforcement units, they should "be able to begin their
actions."

  "It's time for this to end," he said, adding that it was up to "police to
decide when and how."

  The so-called "Freedom Convoy" started with truckers protesting against
mandatory Covid vaccines to cross the US border, but its demands have since
grown to include an end to all pandemic health rules and, for many, a wider
anti-establishment agenda.

  At its peak, the movement also included blockades of a half-dozen border
crossings -- including a key trade route across the Ambassador Bridge between
Windsor, Ontario and Detroit, Michigan.

  Forty-six protesters were arrested and 37 vehicles seized during police
operations at the Ontario-Michigan border, and in Coutts, Alberta, four
people were charged with conspiracy to murder police officers. They were
among 13 arrested with a cache of weapons that included rifles, handguns,
body armor and ammunition.

  On Wednesday, Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said the last blocked
crossing -- between Manitoba and the US state of North Dakota -- had been
reopened.

  As protest organizers at a news conference continued to encourage
supporters to come to the capital, Mendicino said: "Don't. At best, residents
of the city have made it clear that this is not the time and at worst, you
may be tying yourself to dangerous criminal activity."

  The demonstrations, he said, "are not about vaccines mandates."

  Rather, he described the core protesters as "a small number of individuals
with a steely resolve, driven by an extreme ideology that would seek to
overthrow the existing government."