Tuesday, February 08, 2022

Canada truckers - UPDATES: 

Convoy blocks busiest US crossing as Trudeau slams protestors ‘waving swastikas’

Oliver O'Connell,Maroosha Muzaffar and Gino Spocchia

LONG READ

Ottawa remains in a state of emergency as protesters in trucks opposed to Covid-19 restrictions continue to paralyse the centre of the Canadian capital.

At the weekend, thousands of truckers descended on Ottawa for the second time, joining approximately one hundred who have remained for about 12 days. Residents are furious at the nonstop blaring of horns, traffic disruption and harassment and fear no end is in sight after the police chief called it a “siege” that he could not manage.

The “freedom convoy” has attracted support from many US Republicans including former President Donald Trump, who called Prime Minister Justin Trudeau a “far left lunatic” who has "destroyed Canada with insane Covid mandates.”

Multiple arrests have been made related to the protest as Mayor Jim Watson warns that someone may get killed or seriously injured because of the irresponsible behaviour of some of those involved.

The city has asked to increase fines for many offences and to double the size of the police force to address what the mayor called “an aggressive and hateful occupation of our neighbourhoods” that has nothing to do with vaccine mandates.

In an address on Monday, the prime minister took a hard line against the protestors saying “a few people shouting and waving swastikas does not define who Canadians are”. Flags incorporating the Nazi symbol were seen in the initial days of the protest.

The Ambassador Bridge that connects Windsor, Ontario, with Detroit was blockaded by trucks in both directions late on Monday and remains partially closed. It is a crucial commercial link between the US and Canada.

Stay tuned for the latest updates...

Court grants ‘honking injunction’ against ‘Freedom Convoy’

14:24 , Oliver O'Connell

A court in Canada has granted an injunction preventing truckers participating in the ongoing “Freedom Convoy” against Covid-19 vaccine mandates from honking as a part of their protest.

Sravasti Dasgupta reports.

Court grants ‘honking injunction’ against ‘Freedom Convoy’

Trudeau again calls out protesters who waived swastikas

13:15 , Oliver O'Connell

Canada’s prime minister says that Ottawa’s residents did not deserve “to be confronted with the inherent violence of a swastika flying on a street corner”, after the Nazi symbol was seen in the initial days of the protest against the country’s Covid mandates.

“This is a story of a country that got through this pandemic by being united, and a few people shouting and waving swastikas does not define who Canadians are,” he reportedly continued, while asking for the truckers to stop.

“We asked Canadians how they wanted to keep fighting this pandemic, and their answer was clear,’ Mr Trudeau said in parliament. ‘Canadians chose vaccines. They chose science.’

The Liberal party leader has already called out those who were seen flying swastikas during the protest, which has continued going beyond expectations – and has caught the world’s attention – with many on the far right supporting the demonstrations.

Fundraiser for truckers remerges on alternative platform

12:55 , Gino Spocchia

After GoFundMe pulled a fundraiser for the Ottawa truckers from its website at the weekend, the group and its supporters from the American right have reportedly moved the fundraiser elsewhere.

A Christian crowdfunding site called GiveSendGo has now become home to a fundraiser for the truckers, and raised more than $2m in two days.

The platform has been reportedly used to raise money for members of the far right as well accused teenager shooter Kyle Rittenhouse and accused 6 January rioters.

Read about why GoFundMe removed the original fundraiser for Canada’s truckers, below:

What happened to the GoFundMe for Canada’s ‘Freedom Convoy’ truckers?

Trudeau says protest ‘has to stop’

12:35 , Gino Spocchia

Canada’s prime minister Justin Trudeau issued another statement about the trucker protest on Monday night and said the more than week-long demonstration “has to stop”.

“They don’t have the right to blockade our economy, or our democracy, or our fellow citizens’ daily lives,” said the Liberal party leader, after a state of emergency was declared by Ottawa’s mayor.

Mr Trudeau went on to say that “we’ll continue to be there with whatever resources are needed to get the situation under control,” with no sign of the truckers ending their protest against Covid mandates.

New Zealand sees Canada-inspired ‘freedom’ convoy

12:05 , Gino Spocchia

Here is another image from Wellington, the capital of New Zealand, where a copycat demonstration against the country’s stringent rules on Covid were the focus of a protest outside the parliament building on Tuesday.

New Zealand, which has been effectively closed off to the world since March 2020, has among the lowest death tolls of the pandemic – with just 53 recorded in two years. The United States has recorded 900,00, in comparison.

Protesters wave flags from vehicles parked outside the parliament building in Wellington (AFP via Getty Images)
Protesters wave flags from vehicles parked outside the parliament building in Wellington (AFP via Getty Images)

‘Freedom convoy’ boosted by social media reach

11:40 , Gino Spocchia

Tens of thousands of messages about the Ottawa protest have reportedly been shared on Telegram, the social media platform favoured members of the American far right.

Politico also found more than 7,000 posts on Facebook about the truckers’ convoy on US-based Facebook pages, with those posts collecting more than 10 million interactions from 22 January 22 to 5 February.

On Telegram, messages for truckers reportedly advised them to avoiding confrontation with counter protesters, who “are there to bait you”, and which could be captured by news outlets.

The report said both platforms had allowed Republicans and critics of Covid regulations to call for support and fund-raising for the Ottawa ‘freedom convoy’, as well as inspiring other protests in Canada, the US and across the world.

Ciaran O’Connor, an analyst from the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, told Politico that “Rightwing US political figures and content creators…really gave it a boost that made it global,” said

“Donations from abroad are quite a common part of any large crowdfunding campaign,” he added. “But the scale of this one is unprecedented.”

Canadian driver charged with hitting four people

11:20 , Gino Spocchia

A 42-year-old man has been arrested after he allegedly ran over four people at an anti-vaccine mandate protest in the Canadian province of Winnipeg on Friday.

The incident, which reportedly took place outside the legislature building in Manitoba, comes amid the more than week-long protest against Covid mandates in Ottawa.

Read the full story here:

Canadian driver charged with hitting four people during protest

Ottawa police chief says protesters ‘highly organised'

11:00 , Gino Spocchia

Ottawa police chief Peter Sloly has described the trucker protest as “extremely committed” and suggested that people from the US were helping to organise and fund the protests – which have stretched into a second week.

He told Politico that protesters were able to resist “all attempts to end the demonstrations safely” as a result of “significant elements from the United States”, in an interview on Monday.

Thousands of posts on Telegram, a social media platform used by the far-right, have meanwhile seen groups with tens of thousands of members share information and updates on the Canada protests – as well as links to fundraisers for the truckers – the outlet reported.

New Zealand copycat protest ‘not the majority’, says PM

10:40 , Gino Spocchia

New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern issued a statement on Tuesday condemning the Canada-inspired ‘freedom’ convoy that has descended on the country’s capital.

Ms Arden said those protesting Covid rules did not represent the majority view and that “it would be wrong to in any way characterise what we’ve seen outside as a representation of the majority”.

Her first in-person address to parliament in a year came as the protesters vowed to camp outside the parliament building until all Covid-19 curbs are lifted, reported Reuters.

The New Zealand prime minister – whose government has enforced some of the strongest Covid regulations on its citizens – added: “The majority of New Zealanders have done everything they can to keep one another safe.”

Protesters against Covid rules imposed in New Zealand on Tuesday (AP)
Protesters against Covid rules imposed in New Zealand on Tuesday (AP)

ICYMI: Canada asks US Republicans to stay out of domestic affairs

10:20 , Maroosha Muzaffar

Canada’s public safety minister said that the US officials should stay out of his country’s domestic affairs after several GOP leaders supported truckers protesting vaccine mandates.

Marco Mendicino said that “we need to be vigilant about potential foreign interference ... Whatever statements may have been made by some foreign official are neither here nor there. We’re Canadian. We have our own set of laws. We will follow them.”

The comments come after many US Republican leaders — including Donald Trump — supported demonstrators. Mr Trump even called Justin Trudeau a “far-left lunatic” who has “destroyed Canada with insane Covid mandates.”

Canadian truckers being treated like a terror group, Tucker Carlson says

09:50 , Maroosha Muzaffar

Tucker Carlson has said that “people in charge” in Canada are not “really thinking the consequences of their actions through.”

He said on Fox News that Canadian truckers are being “treated like a terror group.”

The Fox News host said: “It’s not Al Qaeda. These are Canadian citizens who drive trucks for a living, but they’re being treated like a terror group.”

He added: “Thousands of truck drivers have descended on Ottawa, the capital city, to protest the tyranny of Justin Trudeau’s government. Justin Trudeau does not like truck drivers. He thinks they’re revolting. Justin Trudeau likes private equity barons and tech moguls, the only people who give him money. Trudeau is not in Ottawa right now. In fact, he and his family fled when the truck drivers arrived and they’ve been in hiding ever since. So when the revolution he has been calling for finally arrived, Justin Trudeau wasn’t there to see it. He ran away in terror, kind of sad.

“According to Justin Trudeau, possessing gasoline in the city of Ottawa is now a crime. Now, to be clear, Ottawa didn’t declare the state of emergency because the truckers lit a courthouse on fire or shot someone or levelled a church. BLM did all of those things, but Justin Trudeau strongly supports BLM,” Mr Carlson said.

Police in Canada seize thousands of litres of fuel

09:08 , Maroosha Muzaffar

Police said on Monday that they have seized thousands of litres of fuel and removed an oil tanker as well in an attempt to end the truckers’ 11-day protest against Covid-19 vaccine mandates.

Police in Canada also claimed that they have noticed a reduced number of trucks and protester numbers had fallen significantly as well.

Meanwhile, Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson has asked for reinforcements for police officials.

In a letter to Justin Trudeau and Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino on Monday, Mr Watson wrote: “The occupation has turned into an aggressive and hateful occupation of our neighbourhoods. People are living in fear and are terrified.”

Court grants ‘honking injunction’ against ‘Freedom Convoy’

07:00 , Maroosha Muzaffar

A court in Canada has granted an injunction preventing truckers participating in the ongoing “Freedom Convoy” against Covid-19 vaccine mandates from honking as a part of their protest.

Read the full story here:

Court grants ‘honking injunction’ against ‘Freedom Convoy’

Canadian truckers block off Michigan border bridge as protest against vaccine mandates hits day 11

06:30 , Maroosha Muzaffar

Canadian truckers protesting against Covid-19 restrictions temporarily closed the border bridge between Canada and the US state of Michigan on Monday.

Demonstrators blocked traffic on the Ambassador Bridge that links Detroit and the Canadian city of Windsor, Ontario, preventing other motorists from passing.

Read the full story here:

Canadian truckers block off US border bridge as vaccine mandate protest hits day 11

Truckers asked to stop honking

05:30 , Maroosha Muzaffar

Truckers protesting the government’s vaccine mandates have been ordered to stop honking their horns.

For the next 10 days, a judge in Ottawa — Hugh McLean — has ordered that truckers silence their horns.

In a ruling on Monday, Judge McLean said: “Tooting a horn is not an expression of any great thought I’m aware of.”

The honking of horns had become a definitive feature of the truckers’ protests and residents and business owners in Ottawa had complained of this.

Meanwhile, protest organisers on Sunday had also called for a temporary stop to the honking until midday as a “gesture of goodwill” towards residents.

Protesters block Ambassador Bridge

05:04 , Maroosha Muzaffar

Canadian truckers protesting Covid vaccination mandates have temporarily closed the Ambassador Bridge that connects Detroit and the Canadian city of Windsor, Ontario.

The protesters blocked the traffic on the largest international suspension bridge and prevented motorists from passing. Many held placards that asked for an end to the mandates.

According to the Michigan Department of Transportation, motorists should use the tunnel rather than the bridge, or head to the Blue Water Bridge that goes from Port Huron to Sarnia, Ontario.

Military response not on cards for Covid protests says Trudeau

04:30 , Oliver O'Connell

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Thursday a military response to the ongoing Ottawa protest against COVID-19 measures is “not in the cards right now.’’

Ottawa police Chief Peter Sloly said this week that all options are on the table, including calling in the military, to end the ongoing demonstration that was being called an “occupation” by some on the city council.

Canada PM: military response not in cards for COVID protests

Justin Trudeau says ‘protest has to stop’

04:00 , Maroosha Muzaffar

Justin Trudeau, speaking in the parliament on Monday, said that the truckers’ protest has to stop as it is affecting the economy.

He said: “Individuals are trying to blockade our economy, our democracy and our fellow citizens’ daily lives, it has to stop.”

He added: “People of Ottawa don’t deserve to be harassed in their own neighbourhoods. They don’t deserve to be confronted with the inherent violence of a swastika flying on a street corner or Confederate flag.

“This is a story of a country that got through this pandemic by being united, and the few people shouting and waving swastikas does not define who Canadians are,” Mr Trudeau said.

New Zealand truckers block streets protesting Covid curbs

03:31 , Maroosha Muzaffar

After Canada, now New Zealand truckers have blocked the streets near the country’s parliament in Wellington on Tuesday to protest the Covid restrictions and vaccinations.

Hundreds of trucks and other kinds of vehicles parked near the parliament building, The Beehive, and several had messages scrawled on them that read “give us back our freedom” and “coercion is not consent.”

AFP quoted a man, Stu Main, as saying: “I’m actually vaccinated but I’m against mandating people to be vaccinated. I think it’s disgraceful, forcing vaccination on people who don’t want it.”

The demonstration was peaceful, and reports said that police made no arrests.

ICYMI: Ottawa mayor declares state of emergency over ‘serious danger’

03:30 , Oliver O'Connell

The mayor of Ottawa has declared a state of emergency in the Canadian capital over the “serious danger and threat” posed by truckers protesting against the Covid-19 vaccine mandate, as demonstrations continue to spread across the country.

Mayor Jim Watson issued the emergency declaration on Sunday over the “ongoing demonstration” which has now entered its second week and has left law enforcement struggling to keep control of the city.

Rachel Sharp reports.

Ottawa mayor declares state of emergency over ‘serious danger’ of trucker protests

Canada pushes back against GOP support for Covid protests

02:30 , Oliver O'Connell

Canada s public safety minister said Monday that US officials should stay out of his country’s domestic affairs, joining other Canadian leaders in pushing back against prominent Republicans who offered support for the protests of Covid-19 mandates that have besieged downtown Ottawa for more than a week.

A day after the city declared a state of emergency, the mayor pleaded for almost 2,000 extra police officers to help quell the raucous nightly demonstrations staged by the so-called Freedom Truck Convoy, which has used hundreds of parked trucks to paralyze the Canadian capital’s business district. The protests have also infuriated people who live around downtown, including neighborhoods near Parliament Hill, the seat of the federal government.

Embattled Ottawa Police Chief Peter Sloly called the demonstration an “unprecedented protest never seen in Canada” and acknowledged that authorities failed to plan for it to last more than three days.

Canada pushes back against GOP support for COVID protests

ICYMI: Canada police act to rein in protests against Covid measures

01:30 , Oliver O'Connell

Protesters opposed to vaccine mandates and Covid-19 restrictions held rallies in cities across Canada on Saturday in a show of solidarity with a week-long demonstration in the national capital.

Officials in Ottawa and numerous provincial capitals worked to ensure that escalating protests against pandemic-related public health measures remained peaceful Saturday.

By midday Saturday in Ottawa, thousands of demonstrators mingled near open fires on the snow-plastered lawn in front Parliament Hill. Participants roasted hotdogs and doled out baked goods under tarps, while two men on horseback traipsed through the town, one carrying a flag in support of former US president Donald Trump

Canada police act to rein in protests against COVID measures

What happened to the trucker GoFundMe?

00:30 , Oliver O'Connell

Crowdfunding platform GoFundMe has announced it is freezing millions of dollars raised in support of anti-vaxxer truckers in Canada and will instead refund donors in full, citing police reports of violence as the reason behind its decision.

Joe Sommerlad reports for The Independent.

What happened to the GoFundMe for Canada’s ‘Freedom Convoy’ truckers?

No, The Simpsons did not predict the Canada truckers convoy

Monday 7 February 2022 23:25 , Oliver O'Connell

Claims that The Simpsons “predicted” the Canada truckers convoy protest have been debunked.

In recent years, the animated series has been said to have predicted everything from Richard Branson’s zero-gravity space flight to Donald Trump’s presidency and the recent UK fuel shortage.

The latest news event which fans claim to have previously featured on The Simpsons involves current protests occurring in Canada.

Isobel Lewis reports.

No, The Simpsons did not predict the Canada truckers convoy

Alaska truckers rally in support of Canada protest

Monday 7 February 2022 22:25 , Oliver O'Connell

The Anchorage Daily News reports that more than 100 Alaska truck drivers rallied from Anchorage to Eagle River on Sunday to support Canadian truck drivers opposed to Covid-19 vaccine mandates.

Anchorage Assembly member Jamie Allard organised the event to support the truckers who have rallied in Ottawa since last weekend. Since 15 January, truck drivers and other essential service providers are allowed to enter Canada only if they are fully vaccinated. The US required vaccinations from essential non-resident travelers on 22 January.

The participants Sunday – including truckers and drivers in personal vehicles – filled the Cabela’s parking lot in South Anchorage before 1 pm and started driving to their final destination, the Eagle River Lions Club, after 1.30 pm. Another convoy drove to Eagle River from the Mat-Su.

Ottawa protestor equates actions with D-Day

Monday 7 February 2022 21:55 , Oliver O'Connell

Police launch arson investigation after attempt at lighting building on fire

Monday 7 February 2022 21:30 , Oliver O'Connell

In the midst of the trucker protest two men were caught on camera attempting to light a building on fire by burn a package of firelighters in the lobby at 5am.

One of the men also taped the door shut to stop anyone getting in or out. According to a tenant in the building one of the men said they were connected to the convoy protests.

After they set the fire and left, a passer-by saw the flames and managed to open the door and put out the fire.

City councillor calls for federal government to take over policing of Parliamentary precinct

Monday 7 February 2022 21:10 , Oliver O'Connell

Ottawa Councillor Catherine McKenney wants the city to ask the federal government to take over control of the Parliamentary precinct.

She tweets that their motion for dealing with the occupation asks the federal government to take over policing responsibility of the Parliamentary Precinct so that local services prioritise residents.

About those air horns...

Monday 7 February 2022 20:50 , Oliver O'Connell

They are still going loud and they’re very loud.

Ottawa mayor asks Trudeau for more police

Monday 7 February 2022 20:30 , Oliver O'Connell

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson has written to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Marco Mendicino, minister of public safety and emergency preparedness, to ask for an additional 1,800 police officers and staff.

Mr Watson said that the demonstration has turned into “an aggressive and hateful occupation of our neighbourhoods” that has nothing to do with vaccine mandates.

Noting the city’s gratitude for the officers already on loan, he calls for “a dramatic and immediate injection of additional officers”.

The request is for 1,000 regular officers, 600 public order officers, 100 investigative officers, and 100 civilian staff, as well as all the supporting resources.

Judge bans air horns at protests

Monday 7 February 2022 20:10 , Oliver O'Connell

A judge will order a 10-day injunction against the use of air horns at protests — a big complaint of people living in downtown Ottawa after 11 days of disruption and noise.

The wording of the order is still to being decided on and a lawyer representing the police will be consulted as to how the ruling will be enforced.

City wants to increase fines

Monday 7 February 2022 19:52 , Oliver O'Connell

Ottawa city officials have written to the chief justice of Ontario asking to increase how much they can fine people for violations of parking and noise restrictions.

The fine for idling could be increased from $100 to $1,000, a noise violation could go up to $1,000 from $490, and encumbering a roadway would also rise to $1,000 from $350.

Ottawa Police chief asks to double size of force

Monday 7 February 2022 19:38 , Oliver O'Connell

Ottawa Police Chief Peter Sloly has told the city council that he needs 1,800 more police and civilian staff to deal with the “Freedom Convoy” demonstration.

The city’s police force currently employs a total of 2,100 people.

Mr Sloly has also asked for changes to noise and parking bylaws to help deal with the protest.

What happened to the trucker GoFundMe?

Monday 7 February 2022 19:19 , Oliver O'Connell

Crowdfunding platform GoFundMe has announced it is freezing millions of dollars raised in support of anti-vaxxer truckers in Canada and will instead refund donors in full, citing police reports of violence as the reason behind its decision.

Joe Sommerlad reports for The Independent.

What happened to the GoFundMe for Canada’s ‘Freedom Convoy’ truckers?

Police call for more resources

Monday 7 February 2022 19:00 , Oliver O'Connell

Ottawa Police have called for more resources as focus turns to seizing fuel from trucker protestors.

Trucker gets a trim

Monday 7 February 2022 18:50 , Oliver O'Connell

On day 11 of the protest, it’s apparently time for a hair cut.

Thousands of litres of fuel seized

Monday 7 February 2022 18:40 , Oliver O'Connell

CTV reports that on Sunday night, dozens of armed police officers and firefighters moved into a parking lot at the Ottawa Baseball Stadium on Coventry Road just before 7pm and seized 3,200 litres of fuel being stored there.

Police said the stadium, about 3 miles or 5km away from Parliament Hill, had become a staging area for the demonstration featuring a wooden structure providing meals, a bouncy castle, a sauna, and a hot tub.

Mayor Jim Watson said: “It’s disturbing when you see the protest turning into what looks like some kind of fun carnival, where they’ve got bouncy castles and hot tubs and saunas.”

He described it as “a complete insult to the people who are putting up with this nonsense” adding it showed “a great deal of insensitivity”.

Protest sets ‘terrible precedent'

Monday 7 February 2022 18:33 , Oliver O'Connell

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino says: “It would be a terrible precedent to say that if you show up to the nation’s capital with heavy equipment and blockade the capital city that you can force reckless change in our public policy.”

Class action suit against truckers

Monday 7 February 2022 18:20 , Oliver O'Connell

“There is a way to do a protest and this, quite frankly, is not it,” says Zexi Li, the lead plaintiff in the multi-million dollar class action lawsuit against the trucker protest filed on behalf of local residents.

The suit seeks C$4.8m in damages for private nuisance and punitive damages amounting to $5m.

Monday 7 February 2022 18:02 , Oliver O'Connell

Protest closures continue

Monday 7 February 2022 17:41 , Oliver O'Connell

CTV reports that the Rideau Centre shopping mall, Ottawa City Hall and the Rink of Dreams, two public library branches and two Covid-19 vaccination clinics all remain closed due to the ongoing road closures and traffic gridlock in downtown Ottawa.

Cadillac Fairview, which owns the Rideau Centre, said that authorities “cannot provide any assurances that it is safe” to open the mall.

statement from the company reads:

While our shared primary concern remains public safety and the safety of those that work within CF Rideau Centre, we are increasingly concerned about the economic impact and financial burden for the thousands of employees and 175 businesses that call CF Rideau Centre home.

The continued closure of an important community space, the loss of employment income, and the financial impact on our clients is heart-breaking given all of our shared pain and sacrifice during the pandemic.

The situation in Ottawa’s downtown core is untenable and we call on all levels of government to collaborate on a solution.

CTV reporter says protestors resupplying

Monday 7 February 2022 17:30 , Oliver O'Connell

CTV’s Glen McGregor posted two videos to Twitter showing what appears to be protestors bringing in more fuel despite police warnings that they would crackdown on resupplying the truckers.

Police chief stands by handling of situation, won’t resign

Monday 7 February 2022 17:25 , Oliver O'Connell

In an interview with CTV, Ottawa Police Chief Peter Sloly stands by his handling of the convoy protests after another weekend of disruption. Asked if he would resign, Mr Sloly replied: “Absolutely not. I came here to do a job.”

Pressed on what had gone wrong, Mr Sloly said: “I don’t think anybody dropped the ball. This is an unprecedented situation and we’re all responding to it; some more effectively than others.”

He added: “I don’t think we ever lost control of the crowd. We had 3,000 trucks come into the city and I head as much as 10-15,000 [people] at the height of the demonstration. That is a massive incursion that happened within hours ... We contained it without any loss of life, injury or rioting, as soon as we got resources we got back on top of it.”

Is the police crackdown working?

Monday 7 February 2022 17:10 , Oliver O'Connell

Seven arrests by Ottawa Police

Monday 7 February 2022 16:59 , Oliver O'Connell

Ottawa Police have made multiple arrests and issued 100 tickets in relation to the trucker protest a statement released on Sunday night says.

  • Two people were arrested on Coventry Road for mischief

  • Multiple vehicles and fuel have been seized.

  • Officers arrested three individuals at Metcalfe and Slater for mischief. The investigation is ongoing and updates will follow.

  • Two more people were arrested this morning. One person was charged for driving while prohibited and the other for mischief relating to property damage of a downtown business.

  • The OPS issued a warning earlier today advising the public that anyone found bringing fuel to the demonstration trucks in red zone could be subject to arrest and charges. This is effective immediately.

  • Confederation Park has been fully cleared and fenced.

  • More than 100 Highway Traffic Act and other Provincial Offence Notices were issued including excessive honking, driving the wrong way, defective muffler, no seat belt, alcohol readily available and having the improper class of driving licence.

Further updates and charges will be released later on Monday.

There are over 60 criminal investigations so far related to the demonstration. They are primarily for mischief, thefts, hate crimes and property damage.

To date, the Ottawa Police Service has received 100 Ontario Provincial Police officers to assist with the demonstrations.

Mayor calls out irresponsible behaviour: ‘Absolute disgrace’

Monday 7 February 2022 16:51 , Oliver O'Connell

On Sunday, Mayor Jim Watson declared a state of emergency, giving the city the “administrative tool” to cut red tape over issues such as procurement.

Mr Watson told CTV News that police will now take a “more aggressive stand”.

“They have to be much more aggressive in terms of these fines. Someone is going to get killed or seriously injured because of the irresponsible behaviour of some of these people who are honking their horns and destroying the fabric of neighbourhoods,” Mr Watson said.

“At the end of the day, it’s going to be a combination of enforcement, to a certain degree, as well as compromise and cutting off the supply lines of these people.”

He added: “We can’t allow them to have barbecues and turn this into a real carnival. It’s an absolute disgrace.”

Ottawa mayor calls for mediator

Monday 7 February 2022 16:46 , Oliver O'Connell

Ottawa’s mayor is calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government to appoint a mediator in an effort to end the ‘Freedom Convoy’ occupation of the centre of the city.

Jim Watson said he has suggested to federal ministers that a mediator could be “an honest broker on both sides to try to find some common ground, if that’s possible”.

“Someone of great stature in our community and the country who can actually open doors and bring some peace and calm to the situation,” Mr Watson told CTV Morning Live. “That’s one option that I think the federal government should pursue, because right now we’re at a complete standoff.”

Mr Watson’s suggestion comes ahead of a special council meeting Monday afternoon, with the ongoing demonstration entering an 11th day.

Ottawa Police threaten arrests

Monday 7 February 2022 16:30 , Oliver O'Connell

Ottawa Police have threatened arrest for anyone attempting to bring material supports, including fuel, to the demonstrators.

The Simpsons did not predict the Canada trucker protest

Monday 7 February 2022 16:07 , Oliver O'Connell

Claims that The Simpsons “predicted” the Canada truckers convoy protest have been debunked.

Isobel Lewis has the story.

No, The Simpsons did not predict the Canada truckers convoy

Vancouver mayor and Ted Cruz spar on Twitter over convoy

Monday 7 February 2022 15:52 , Oliver O'Connell

Vancouver mayor Kennedy Stewart and US senator Ted Cruz are embroiled in a verbal showdown on Twitter about the massive “freedom convoy” of Canadian truckers protesting against vaccine mandates.

Mr Cruz weighed in on Canadian affairs after Mr Stewart, Vancouver mayor, released a statement on 5 February, urging protesters to “go home” to make their point ahead of truckers’ planned protests in the city.

“As the Mayor of a city with an over 95 per cent vaccination rate, my message to the convoy is this: Vancouver doesn’t want you here. Make your point and then go home,” the statement by Mr Stewart said.

Canadian mayor shuts down Ted Cruz as he encourages truckers to starve country

Meta says it removed scammers' Canada convoy Facebook groups


Truckers and their supporters continue to protest COVID-19 vaccine mandates in Ottawa

Mon, February 7, 2022
By Elizabeth Culliford

(Reuters) - Facebook parent Meta Platforms said on Monday it had removed dozens of groups, pages and accounts that latched onto the truck convoy protest in Canada but were run by spammers and scammers, including in Vietnam.

A "Freedom Convoy" has disrupted life in downtown Ottawa for 11 days, starting as a movement against a Canadian vaccine mandate for cross-border drivers but turning into a rallying point against Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and many of the Canadian governments' public health measures.

"We continue to see scammers latch onto any hot-button issue that draws people's attention, including the ongoing protests," said Meta spokeswoman Margarita Franklin.

"Over the past week, we've removed Groups and Pages run by spammers...who used abusive tactics to mislead people about the origin and popularity of their content to drive them to off-platform websites," she said. Meta said users were sent to websites filled with pay-per-click ads.

The protest in Canada has also been promoted online by right-wing communities and social media influencers in various countries including in the United States.

"The Canadian convoy movement has been championed online by extreme right-wing communities & offered a blue print to extremist COVID protest groups worldwide," Ciaran O'Connor, an analyst from the Institute for Strategic Dialogue think tank which tracks extremism, said on Twitter.

Meta said it had also taken down one Facebook group associated with the convoy protest for breaking its rules against sharing content promoting the QAnon conspiracy theory.

(Reporting by Elizabeth Culliford in New York; Editing by Chris Reese)
Multiple people arrested at 'Freedom Convoy' protests in Ottawa




Mon, February 7, 2022

Canadian authorities have arrested multiple people in Ottawa who were part of a "Freedom Convoy" protesting COVID-19 vaccine mandates.

In a statement on Sunday, the Ottawa Police Service said it has launched 60 criminal investigations from the protests, stemming from mischief, property crimes and thefts all the way to hate crimes.

According to The Washington Post, Ottawa Police said they have made seven arrests in relation to property damage and other acts of "mischief" as of Sunday evening.

Police also said that multiple vehicles and fuel have been seized during the protests, according to the statement.

Authorities also issued more than 500 tickets over the weekend for notices such as "excessive honking" and seat belt violations, the Post reported.

"More than 100 Highway Traffic Act and other Provincial Offence Notices were issued including excessive honking, driving the wrong way, defective muffler, no seat belt, alcohol readily available and having the improper class of driving licence," OPS said in its statement.

The city of Ottawa declared a state of emergency on Sunday in response to the second week of protests against local COVID-19 restrictions.

"Declaring a state of emergency reflects the serious danger and threat to the safety and security of residents posed by the ongoing demonstrations and highlights the need for support from other jurisdictions and levels of government," Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson said in a statement.

Truck drivers starting last month were required to enter Canada fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, following a similar requirement the U.S. government implemented on truck drivers entering the country.

In a statement last week, the Canadian Trucking Alliance condemned the actions of some demonstrators during the protest, calling it a "disgusting act."

Ottawa declares state of emergency over 'serious danger' posed by anti-mandate protest

Catherine Garcia, Night editor
Sun, February 6, 2022, 

Police in Ottawa. Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson declared a state of emergency on Sunday in response to the anti–vaccine mandate protest roiling Canada's capital, saying this declaration "reflects the serious danger and threat to the safety and security of residents posed by the ongoing demonstrations and highlights the need for support from other jurisdictions and levels of government."

Watson told CBC News that the state of emergency "gives our staff and our city a few extra tools to speed things up like procurement. We're in the midst of a serious emergency, the most serious emergency our city has ever faced, and we need to cut the red tape to get these supplies available to our police officers and to our public works staff."

The protest was organized by a group calling itself the Freedom Convoy, and is against the requirement that cross-border truck drivers receive COVID-19 vaccinations. The demonstration began 10 days ago, and Ottawa residents have complained of truck horns blaring at all hours and verbal and physical altercations with protesters. Ottawa police said there are 97 criminal investigations now underway, and 11 are related to hate crimes. So far, four people have been charged.

Diane Deans, a city councilor and chair of the Ottawa Police Services Board, said on Saturday that "this group is emboldened by the lack of enforcement by every level of government." Ottawa police later announced that anyone bringing "material aid" to demonstrators, like fuel, could be arrested.

In addition to being against the vaccine mandate for drivers, many of the demonstrators are also protesting public health measures put in place to curb the spread of COVID-19 and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. CBC News reports that the protesters still in Ottawa say they won't leave until all COVID-19 restrictions are lifted; most of the policies were introduced by provinces.
Canada pushes back against GOP support for COVID protests



2/ 9
Canada pushes back against GOP support for COVID protestsA protester affixes a flag to the top of a truck, parked beside another with a sign calling for the jailing of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, outside Parliament Hill, as a protest against COVID-19 restrictions continues into its second week in Ottawa on Monday, Feb. 7, 2022.
(Justin Tang/The Canadian Press via AP)

ROB GILLIES and TRACEY LINDEMAN
Mon, February 7, 2022

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — Canada's public safety minister said Monday that U.S. officials should stay out of his country's domestic affairs, joining other Canadian leaders in pushing back against prominent Republicans who offered support for the protests of COVID-19 restrictions that have besieged downtown Ottawa for more than a week.

A day after the city declared a state of emergency, the mayor pleaded for almost 2,000 extra police officers to help quell the raucous nightly demonstrations staged by the so-called Freedom Truck Convoy, which has used hundreds of parked trucks to paralyze the Canadian capital's business district. The protests have also infuriated people who live around downtown, including neighborhoods near Parliament Hill, the seat of the federal government.

“Individuals are trying to blockade our economy, our democracy, and our fellow citizens’ daily lives,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in an emergency debate in Parliament, while the protest continued outside. “It has to stop."



Trudeau said everyone is tired of COVID-19 but this is not the way. He said the restrictions won't last forever and noted that Canada has one of the highest vaccination rates in the world. 

“Canadians trust science,” Trudeau said. “A few people shouting and waving swastikas does not define who Canadians are.”

Protests unfolded elsewhere too. A truck-convoy protest near the Ambassador Bridge, the busiest border crossing between Canada and the U.S., caused long traffic backups along the span from the Detroit side of the Detroit River. And in Alaska, more than 100 truck drivers rallied in support of their counterparts in Canada by driving the 10 miles from Anchorage to Eagle River, the Anchorage Daily News reported.

Many members of the GOP have made comments supporting the demonstrations, including former President Donald Trump, who called Trudeau a “far left lunatic” who has “destroyed Canada with insane COVID mandates."

Protesters have said they will not leave until all vaccine mandates and COVID-19 restrictions are lifted. They also called for the removal of Trudeau’s government, though it is responsible for few of the restrictive measures, most of which were put in place by provincial governments.

Prominent Republicans including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton complained after crowdfunding site GoFundMe said it would refund the vast majority of the millions of dollars raised by demonstrators.

The site said it cut off funding for protest organizers after determining that their efforts violated the site’s terms of service by engaging in unlawful activity. Ontario Provincial Premier Doug Ford has called the protest an occupation.

In response, Paxton tweeted: “Patriotic Texans donated to Canadian truckers’ worthy cause.” Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said on Fox News that “government doesn’t have the right to force you to comply to their arbitrary mandates."

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino shot back: “It is certainly not the concern of the Texas attorney general as to how we in Canada go about our daily lives in accordance with the rule of law."

“We need to be vigilant about potential foreign interference ... Whatever statements may have been made by some foreign official are neither here nor there. We’re Canadian. We have our own set of laws. We will follow them,” Mendicino said.

In a letter to Trudeau and the public safety minister, Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson said “what was initially described as a peaceful protest has now turned into a siege of our downtown area" with 400 to 500 trucks. He asked for 1,800 additional police officers. That would nearly double the existing resources of the entire Ottawa Police Service, which has 2,100 police and civilian members.

Dominic LeBlanc, the minister of intergovernmental affairs, blamed the GOP interference for inciting disorderly conduct and helping to fund entities that are not respecting Canadian law. Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair said Paxton was wrong for commenting on it.

Bruce Heyman, a former U.S. ambassador to Canada, said groups in the U.S. need to stop funding and interfering in the domestic affairs of America’s neighbor.

On the street in front of Parliament Hill were thousands of signs ranging from “no more mandates” and “freedom of choice” to “truck you Trudeau” and some compared vaccine mandates to fascism.

Trudeau has called the protesters a “fringe,” but he faces calls by the opposition Conservative party to extend an “olive branch” to them. Some Conservative lawmakers, including one running to lead the party, have met and posted for pictures with them.

Embattled Ottawa Police Chief Peter Sloly called the demonstration an “unprecedented protest never seen in Canada” and acknowledged that authorities failed to plan for it to last more than three days.

Steve Bell, the city’s deputy police chief, said a person from Ohio was arrested in connection with a threat against Ottawa police headquarters.

Meanwhile, Ottawa police were investigating a fire at an apartment building that was apparently set by protesters. Matias Munoz said residents of the building south of Parliament Hill were already at their wits’ end Saturday night as the noise of the protest blared through their homes for the ninth night in a row.

When he came downstairs Sunday morning, Munoz said the carpet and floor were charred, and there were blackened fire-starter bricks strewn across the lobby.

Surveillance video showed two men light a package of the bricks in the lobby and tape or tie the front door handles together before leaving through a side door before dawn. The video also showed a different man entering the building and putting the fire out a short while later, Munoz said.

"Somebody trying to do something as insidious as taping the door shut so people can’t leave if there’s a fire in the main lobby — it’s terror, is what it is,″ Munoz said.

Ottawa police declined to release details, citing the ongoing investigation.

In other developments, Ontario Superior Court Justice Hugh McLean granted a 10-day injunction to prevent truckers parked on city streets in downtown Ottawa from honking their horns incessantly.

___

Gillies reported from Toronto and Corey Williams in Detroit contributed.
Canadian truckers protesting vaccines turned to a Christian fundraising site after GoFundMe blocked donations. They've already raised $4 million.


Canadian truckers protesting vaccines turned to a Christian fundraising site after GoFundMe blocked donations. They've already raised $4 million.

Rebecca Cohen,Kieran Press-Reynolds
Mon, February 7, 2022,

Canadian truckers protesting COVID-19 vaccine mandates moved to a Christian fundraising platform after GoFundMe suspended their campaign.

The Freedom Convoy has raised $4 million on GiveSendGo where they are "demanding" the federal government "cease all mandates."

The group has been protesting for 10 days, prompting the mayor of Ottawa to declare a state of emergency.


Canadian truckers in Ottawa who are protesting COVID-19 vaccine mandates turned to a Christian fundraising platform after GoFundMe blocked donations to their campaign.

The group, known as Freedom Convoy, has since raised more than $4 million on the Christian fundraising site GiveSendGo.

"To our Fellow Canadians, the time for political over reach is over," the group said on GiveSendGo. "Our current government is implementing rules and mandates that are destroying the foundation of our businesses, industries and livelihoods."

"We are taking our fight to the doorsteps of our Federal Government and demanding that they cease all mandates against its people," the group added.

The fundraiser on GiveSendGo was launched after GoFundMe revoked the Freedom Convoy's fundraiser upon learning of the group's actions.

"GoFundMe supports peaceful protests and we believe that was the intention of the Freedom Convoy 2022 fundraiser when it was first created," GoFundMe said in a statement. "We now have evidence from law enforcement that the previously peaceful demonstration has become an occupation, with police reports of violence and other unlawful activity."

The Freedom Convoy's GiveSendGo page crashed a number of times on Monday as the fundraiser continued to spread online. A spokesperson for GiveSendGo told Insider "occasional hiccups" were occurring because of increased traffic to the site.

GiveSendGo's website describes itself as the "#1 Free Christian Crowdfunding Site" and "a place to work together with the body of Christ around the world to make a difference." The platform's official Twitter account tweeted on Sunday night that it was a "miracle" that so much money had been donated in the span of 48 hours.


The Freedom Convoy has been protesting in the country's capital for 10 days, using their trucks to block streets while supporters bring them fuel on sleds. Thousands of people are involved in the protest, Insider previously reported. The demonstration led the mayor of Ottawa to declare a state of emergency on Sunday.

"Declaring a state of emergency reflects the serious danger and threat to the safety and security of residents posed by the ongoing demonstrations," Mayor Jim Watson's office said in a statement.

On Sunday, Ottawa police released a statement that said it launched 60 criminal investigations in connection with the demonstration. At least seven people have been arrested and 100 have been ticketed, the police said.

Those who donated to the group's initial GoFundMe can request a full refund, and any remaining funds donated to the campaign will be donated to "credible and established charities chosen by the Freedom Convoy 2022 organizers and verified by GoFundMe," GoFundMe said.

Multiple far-right personalities with a history of sharing conspiracy theories posted in priase of the convoy on Telegram over the last week.


On Saturday, one Telegram user with 150,000 subscribers wrote a post featuring clips of the convoy that gained over 76,000 views. Another far-right influencer with 140,000 Telegram subscribers in a post on Thursday called the protest the "most amazing trucker convoy in history."

Read the original article on Business Insider
Ted Cruz Throws In With Anti-Vaccine Ottawa Trucker Mob As City Declares Emergency

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) became the latest hard-right politician to back a mob of anti-vaccine Canadian truckers occupying downtown Ottawa, which has declared a state of emergency over the strong-arm protest.

God bless these Canadian truck drivers,” Cruz crowed in a tweet Sunday.

“They’re defending Canada, America, and they’re standing up for freedom! The government doesn’t have the right to force you to comply to their arbitrary mandates.”

Cruz on Saturday clashed with Vancouver’s mayor, who told the rogue truckers to stay away. Cruz suggested in a tweet that the city might learn a lesson with hunger as market shelves emptied without the drivers.

But Mayor Kennedy Stewart fired back that 90% of Canada’s truck drivers are vaccinated and no one’s worried about the absent protesters.

The truckers in what they call the “Freedom Convoy” have been protesting for 10 days in Ottawa against the requirement that they be vaccinated before they can drive across the border into the U.S.

City officials, fearing violence from the rowdy protesters, on Sunday declared a state of emergency.

“We’re in the midst of a serious emergency, the most serious emergency our city has ever faced,” the mayor of Ottawa, Jim Watson, said in an interview.

“Someone is going to get killed or seriously injured because of the irresponsible behavior of some of these people,” he mayor warned.

The truckers convoy was hit Friday with a $9.8 million class-action complaint on behalf of Ottawa citizens for relentlessly blasting their air horns for up to 16 hours a day while jamming streets. They have also been accused of harassing area residents and shoppers, even assaulting some, and ripping masks off residents’ faces.

Ottawa’s premier complained that the protest morphed days ago into an “unacceptable occupation.”

This is a siege. It is something that is different in our democracy than I’ve ever experienced in my life,” Ottawa police Chief Peter Sloly said.

Similar protests are beginning to spread to Toronto, Winnipeg, Quebec City and other provincial capitals.

After police expressed concerns, GoFundMe on Friday shut down an online fundraising campaign and blocked close to $10 million money raised for the convoy because of “unlawful” activities, it said in a statement.

“We now have evidence from law enforcement that the previously peaceful demonstration has become an occupation, with police reports of violence and other unlawful activity,” the statement added.

Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis on Saturday announced on Twitter he was launching an investigation and accused GoFundMe of “fraud” for “commandeering” the money raised for the truckers. He insisted the money should be refunded.

Though GoFundMe initially said it would refund the money or redirect it to charities, it announced hours before DeSantis’ tweet that it would automatically be refunding all donations.

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) also complained about GoFundMe’s action on Twitter, and Elon Musk gushed: “Canadian truckers rule.”

Donald Trump Jr. called via a tweet on Friday for all Republican attorneys general in the U.S. to investigate.

Attorneys general Jeff Landry of Louisiana, Patrick Morrisey of West Virginia and Ken Paxton of Texas all indicated they’re launching investigations into GoFundMe on behalf of the truckers.

Paxton boasted that “patriotic” Texans donated to the “Canadian Truckers’ worthy cause.”

The Canadian Trucking Alliance, the main advocacy organization for the nation’s truckers, and the Ontario Trucking Association have disavowed the protest, the Ottawa Citizen reported. The Trucking Alliance said the vast majority of its members are fully vaccinated and are continuing to work.

University of Ottawa associate criminology professor Michael Kempa said in a CBC-TV interview Sunday that the movement is fundamentally organized and funded by those with an autocratic political agenda, including American interests, and aimed at undermining Canadian rule of law and democracy.

“They’re people interested in undoing the conventional state system, and replacing the Canadian democratic model with something that is much more grassroots authoritarian and far-right conservative,” Kempa said.

“Generally, they are outside, and intent on dismantling, the political mainstream. They’re not interested in the ... liberal system we have here in Canada.”

Kempa said Canadians were taken aback by the truckers behavior and suggested the military should reestablish order.

 


Republican Lawmaker Basically Begs 
Anti-Vax Truckers to Blockade the
Super Bowl

Jack Crosbie
Mon, February 7, 2022

Pro-Trump Rally And Caravan Held On Long Island, New York - Credit: Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

For the past 11 days, hundreds of protestors, many of whom are driving big-rig trucks have occupied Canada’s capital city of Ottawa, blocking streets and disrupting the city with raucous demonstrations. These trucker protests, led by the so-called “Freedom Convoy” now besieging Ottawa, began after the Canadian and U.S. government enacted a rule requiring cross-border truckers to be fully vaccinated in order to get into either of the two countries.

The protests, like massive, heavily polarized movements are wont to do, spiraled into a wider, incoherent demonstration against public health measures as a whole. And now, they may be coming to the U.S.

Analysts watching right-wing chatter on apps like Telegram have recently seen an outpouring of organizing around direct actions similar to Canada’s trucker protests, which spread from the Ottawa occupation to large disruptive actions across the country, including at a border crossing to the U.S. in Alberta. In particular, some right wingers seem to be plotting to shut down the Super Bowl this weekend. Trump megafan and Arizona State Senator Wendy Rogers took up that mantle yesterday, giving us this particularly bizarre take:



Rogers is a fringe figure, deep in the far right, but there are signs that the “trucker protest” model is rapidly catching on with more mainstream conservatives. Here’s Rand Paul, often one of the main gateways of the idiocy exchange between the far right and GOP mainstream:



The sentiment seems to be spreading fast, but it seems doubtful that the right would be able to mobilize anything significant in time for the Super Bowl next weekend, according to Jared Holt, a fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab who studies right-wing movements.

“The desire to provide an American answer to the Canadian protests and cause havoc and headaches is completely there,” Holt told Rolling Stone. “What isn’t, at this point, is a clear plan and call to action.”

Holt noted on Twitter that some of the familiar spokes of right-wing organizing are already there — media networks are covering the trucker protests favorably, groups are starting to discuss or solicit financing for some form of action, and many of the groups have large numbers of members. But there’s no one narrative or specific action that has taken hold in the way that the right rallied at in Washington, D.C., last Jan. 6, or during Charlottesville’s Unite the Right event.

“If organizers are able to speak over that frenzy with a clear plan to action, there may be a potential to generate a similar event, though I’m skeptical of its ability to capture the same scale it did in Canada,” Holt said. “Maybe most importantly, it’s not totally clear that American truckers are actually ready or willing to do this.”

In other words, we’ll have to hope that America’s truckers are more responsible behind the wheel than the ones currently honking their horns in Canada’s capital.
MILLIONAIRE TRUCKERS PROTEST
Canadian police seize fuel, remove oil tanker; court silences protesters' horns



Truckers and supporters continue to protest against COVID-19 vaccine mandates in Ottawa

Mon, February 7, 2022
By Anna Mehler Paperny, David Ljunggren and Ismail Shakil

OTTAWA (Reuters) -Police in Canada's capital said on Monday they had seized thousands of liters of fuel and removed an oil tanker as part of a crackdown to end an 11-day protest against COVID-19 measures, adding truck and protester numbers had fallen significantly.

The protest, which has gridlocked Ottawa, has been largely peaceful but ear-splitting horn blaring by protesters saw a court on Monday grant an interim injunction preventing people from sounding horns in the city's downtown.

The so-called "Freedom Convoy" consisting of truckers and other motorists started as a movement opposing a Canadian vaccine mandate for cross-border drivers - a requirement mirrored by a U.S. rule - has morphed into a rallying point against Prime Minister Justin Trudeau' public health measures.

Trudeau, who appeared on Monday for the first time in nearly a week after being infected by COVID, said the protest has to stop. Responding to an emergency debate in the parliament, Trudeau denounced the tactics used by demonstrators.

"This is a story of a country that got through this pandemic by being united and a few people shouting and waving swastikas does not define who Canadians are," he said.

Trudeau and his family left Ottawa to an undisclosed location as the convoy started rolling into the city due to security concerns. The protests last week included some Confederate and Nazi flags. AND LOT'S OF AMERICAN FLAGS

Canadians have largely followed government's health measures and nearly 79% of the eligible population has taken two doses of the vaccine. But recent polls have shown frustrations against restrictions are growing.

While Ottawa awoke to its second week of what its political and policing leaders now describe as a siege, Ottawa Police Chief Peter Sloly said on Monday activity has decreased at the blockades. This weekend, police counted 1,000 trucks and 5,000 protesters, down from 3,000 trucks and 10,000 to 15,000 protesters last weekend, Sloly added.

"We are turning up the heat in every way we possibly can," Sloly told reporters, days after he said there may not be a "policing solution" to the occupation. "We are asking for a major push of resources to come in the next 72 hours."

On Monday, a Canadian judge granted a 10-day injunction preventing people from sounding horns in downtown Ottawa. The injunction was part of a class-action lawsuit brought on behalf of downtown Ottawa residents, some of whom have said they feel unsafe in their own neighbourhood.

The Ambassador Bridge, a major road bridge connecting Canada and the United States was temporarily closed in both directions, the Canadian government website said https://bit.ly/3rww8zo late Feb. 7. The Windsor-Detroit border is the busiest international crossing in North America.

'PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE'


Deputy Police Chief Steve Bell told city councillors on Monday police had received "active threats to public figures throughout this occupation," which they continue to investigate.

Ottawa police have received help from hundreds of officers in other police agencies, but they say it is not enough. Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson asked for reinforcements in a letter on Monday to Trudeau and Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino.

"The occupation has turned into an aggressive and hateful occupation of our neighbourhoods," he wrote. "People are living in fear and are terrified." He called the honking "tantamount to psychological warfare."

A short stretch of Metcalfe Street in downtown Ottawa, home to Canada's parliament, central bank, and buildings including Trudeau's office, smelled of campfire on Monday. A clustering of trucks, cars and tractors without trailers bore signs deriding everything from vaccines and mandates to Canada's carbon tax.

One sign showed a poster of Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees rights including that of life, liberty and security of the person - subject to "reasonable limits."

'PRIME MINISTER STOP HIDING'


Packets of water bottles, briquettes and diapers were piled high beside open-sided white tents with tables of food.

There was also evidence of pushback from residents. Small signs in the ground-floor windows of an apartment building a few blocks away said: "GO HOME MORONS" and "VACCINES SAVE LIVES."

"We cannot allow an angry crowd to reverse the course that continues to save lives in this last stretch. This should never be a precedent for how to make policy in Canada," Mendicino told reporters on Monday.


Trudeau did not attend the press conference and missed question period in the parliament.

"When will the prime minister stop hiding, show up for Canadians, show some leadership and fix the mess that he's created?" interim Conservative Party leader Candice Bergen, who has supported the protests, told the House of Commons.

On Sunday night, police began removing gas and fuel supplies at a logistics encampment set up by protesters after the city's mayor declared a state of emergency https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/protest-against-vaccine-mandates-paralyzing-canada-capital-mayor-says-2022-02-06 on Sunday.

A well-organized supply chain -- including portable saunas, a community kitchen and bouncy castles for children -- has sustained the protesters. It has relied partly on funding from sympathizers in the United States, police said.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk have praised the truckers.

Over the weekend, protests spilled over into other large Canadian cities, including the financial capital Toronto, and were met with counter demonstrations.

(Reporting by Anna Mehler-Paperny in Ottawa; Additonal reporting by Radhika AnilkumarWriting by Denny Thomas; Editing by Andrea Ricci, Lisa Shumaker and Michael Perry)
Meta's vision for the metaverse is an 'old idea' that's 'never worked,' tech CEO says


Isobel Asher Hamilton
Sun, February 6, 2022

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.Facebook


Phil Libin is the former boss of Evernote and is now CEO of videoconference company Mmhmm.

He told Insider he'd tried out Horizon Workrooms, Meta's VR-meeting software, and wasn't impressed.

He described Meta's vision of the metaverse as "uncreative."


When tech founder Phil Libin donned his Oculus VR headset to try out Meta's first metaverse product, he was hoping it wouldn't be terrible.


"I had a very, very strong feeling that it would suck, but I went into it with as much hope as possible that I would be pleasantly surprised," Libin said in an interview with Insider.

He and his employees at videoconference company Mmhmm, where he is CEO, were trying out Meta's Horizon Workrooms product. Horizon Workrooms lets people use VR headsets for virtual work meetings in the so-called metaverse.

Libin said his gut instinct turned out to be correct. "It was only tolerable for a few minutes," he said.

He believes that using VR for meetings is less enticing than familiar technologies such as Zoom, where people can still do real-world things like drink a cup of coffee. "Can't do that with a giant plastic thing on my face without spilling hot coffee all over myself," Libin said.


Horizon Workrooms, Meta's VR meetings product.Facebook

The word "metaverse" is borrowed from science fiction and refers to a future version of the internet accessed through immersive technologies such as virtual-reality and augmented-reality headsets. It has been pushed in particular by Mark Zuckerberg, who rebranded Facebook as Meta in October.

In its fourth-quarter earnings report Wednesday, Meta said its new metaverse business lost $10 billion and its user base shrank for the first time in its history. Meta stock plummeted 26.4% Thursday, erasing nearly $240 billion from the company's valuation in the largest one-day wipeout in US corporate history.

Libin has previously been critical of the hype surrounding the metaverse. In a podcast interview last month, he compared the hype with communist propaganda he received as a child living in the former Soviet Union.

And he remains unconvinced.

He says the vision of the metaverse presented by Meta — one of an "interconnected 3D world that we experience for many hours a day, both for fun and for work primarily through VR" — "that package of things is godawful."

"It's an old idea," Libin told Insider. "It's uncreative, it's been tried many, many times over the past four decades and it's never worked."

Proponents of the metaverse believe we'll have to wait to see its full potential, Libin said, but he doesn't think that's how great technology works.

"I think great technology starts out being primitive, but it starts out being great immediately," he said. Over time, he said, great technology gets "more polished and more mature and more sophisticated."

He gave the example of early video-game consoles and his first-ever purchase from Amazon in the mid-1990s.

"It was my very first ever e-commerce transaction — went to the Amazon website, and Amazon in the mid-'90 was super primitive. It was like a text-based site, all you could do is buy books from it. And it didn't have one-click checkout; it was very, very basic. But I bought a couple of books and I remember understanding at that point, this is amazing."

As for Horizon Workrooms, Libin said: "It's not gonna get better because it started bad. It started stupid. It can get more sophisticated, but it'll just be more sophisticated — but still bad."

Read the original article on Business Insider