Sunday, March 20, 2022

 Was it really about vaccine mandates — or something darker? The inside story of the convoy protests



LONG READ

For three weeks this winter, a so-called “Freedom Convoy” delivered thousands of demonstrators into downtown Ottawa, turning them into an occupying force that snarled daily life in the nation’s capital and dominated the national conversation.

But who were the demonstrators, really — and what were they after?


Many of them positioned the protest as a fight against vaccination mandates for cross-border truckers. Others saw it as a campaign against pandemic restrictions more broadly. No doubt the occupation was many things to many people. But for several of its organizers, the protest was the culmination of years of work, their best chance yet to coalesce a movement around their preferred conspiracy theories and a violent anti-government ideology.

The convoy protest was not about just the pandemic. But nor could it have happened without the pandemic. Organizers were able to leverage fatigue and frustration with government restrictions and social isolation to grow their movement, drawing on one particularly potent conspiracy theory in the process: the idea that an international cabal has taken control of Canada, and is weaponizing the pandemic to consolidate its dominance. This occupation was marketed as the last stand to stop tyranny — and has become a global rallying cry for a burgeoning anti-media, anti-science, anti-government political force.

Remarkably, the occupation was ended without major incident. Normalcy has returned to downtown Ottawa: Commuters sit in slow, but not frozen, traffic. Politicians bustle through Centretown on their way to the House of Commons. Journalists roam freely, without hired security in tow.

The nation’s capital is back to its famously boring self.

But it’s an unsettled peace. Where has the movement — and its anger — gone? And what comes next in its plan to stop the globalist takeover of Canada?

In a sense, the story begins more than a year before the pandemic.


In a video posted to his Facebook page, James Bauder is standing in a snow-covered parking lot in Thunder Bay, pointing his phone camera at the assembled convoy. There is a pickup truck with its bed full of red jerry cans. A small group of people mills about in reflective yellow vests, brandishing a Canadian flag. Cars and semi trucks are covered in homemade signs.

“Everybody in Canada is involved in this,” Bauder told his Facebook friends. “We got people across our great nation travelling to go to Ottawa to stand up for Canada unity.”

When it arrived in Ottawa, their convoy gathered at Parliament Hill, where the protesters demanded a say in how the country was governed. “I brought myself a pink slip,” organizer Pat King said in an interview, “and I would like to hand it to Mr. Trudeau.”

The convergence on Ottawa for two days in January 2019, dubbed “United We Roll,” was moderately successful, attracting the support of Conservative party leader Andrew Scheer and collecting more than $140,000 through an online fundraising campaign.

A few months later in Medicine Hat, Alta., Benjamin Dichter stood at an event to introduce a man who bills himself as a top intelligence analyst and whom Dichter, in a comparison to novelist Tom Clancy’s fictional CIA agent, called “Canada’s Jack Ryan.”

When he took the stage, Tom Quiggin described a plot between Islamists and socialists to control Western governments. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, he warned, was the apex of that “entryism.”

“If he is re-elected this fall, and he does not immediately disavow his previous commitments to globalism and Islamism, he will then be pouring gasoline on the already burning embers of discontent,” Quiggin warned audience members including Tamara Lich, who had helped organize the event.

Quiggin touted his speaking tour as an urgent call to resist this encroaching new world order. (In a 2019 podcast, he would warn that Trudeau could usher in an era in which “widespread civic violence occurs or, in the worst-case scenario, a sort of civil war.”)

But there was another pressing reason for it: money. Quiggin was raising funds to fight a defamation lawsuit launched after he accused prominent Canadian Muslims of being the clandestine leadership of the Muslim Brotherhood, which Quiggin alleges is a terror organization. The lawsuit is ongoing; a GoFundMe campaign set up by Dichter has so far raised more than $42,000 to fund his defence.

As a conspiracy theorist, Quiggin was convinced that something was rotten in Ottawa. He wasn’t the only one.

Norman Traversy then invoked the rallying cry of QAnon, the American conspiracy theory movement that claims Satanic pedophiles have infiltrated the U.S. government. “Where we go one …” he shouted to those assembled. “We go all!” the crowd shouted back.

Standing directly behind him was King, who would go on to become a public face of the protesters.

The next day, Corey Hurren posted a meme to his Instagram account falsely alleging that Microsoft founder Bill Gates and the Switzerland-based World Economic Forum were complicit in creating COVID-19. Half an hour later, Hurren drove a truck loaded with guns through the front gates of Rideau Hall, an apparent attempt of removing the prime minister from power. Hurren would later plead guilty to eight charges.

In 2021, James Bauder would find a way to pull these strands together.

The World Economic Forum provided a perfect target.

The organization hosts an annual retreat in Davos, Switzerland where members of the political, business and cultural elite gather to promote liberal economic policies and recognize the leaders who champion their progressive capitalist values. The Forum has been led by its founder, Klaus Schwab, for a half century.

But in an information universe where institutions are presented as corrupt and malign, critics have coloured its mission with an ominous hue. Along with the United Nations and the World Health Organization, conspiracy theorists have baselessly alleged the WEF is complicit in releasing COVID-19 into the world to enact mass control, open borders, and the imposition of a Chinese-style digital surveillance establishment. In essence: Totalitarianism.

Bauder wrote on Facebook that Trudeau “needs too (sic) be arrested and charged for treason, and for participating in committing crimes against humanity” and warned that it was nearly too late to stop the World Economic Forum’s devious plan: “WE HAVE BEEN LEAD (sic) RIGHT INTO A TRAP. A few more moves and it’s checkmate, Game Over.”

Pat King’s presence was also increasing on social media, where he warned his followers, “There’s an endgame: It’s called depopulation of the Caucasian race.” Dichter had become increasingly involved in the People’s Party of Canada, the right-leaning political party founded by former Conservative MP Maxime Bernier, and warned the Ontario Legislature of a “gradual Islamization of Canada by erasing its national identity.”

They’d had enough.

“Truckers,” Bauder wrote on Facebook in August 2021, “wanna make some noise?”

In the months that followed, Bauder came up with the idea for Operation Bear Hug, a plan modelled after the United We Roll convoy. He would recruit a veritable army of patriots to head to the capital and surround it — in protest of COVID-19 vaccination mandates, masks, vaccines and the violations of personal freedoms he claimed they represented. He started an organization to advance the plan: Canada Unity.

If the problem was a global conspiracy, then the solution had to be more than just talk. Bauder was seeking real change. He began touting a so-called “memorandum of understanding” that detailed the protest’s objectives. “By having the Senate of Canada and the Governor General of Canada sign this MOU into action, they agree to immediately cease and desist all unconstitutional, discriminatory and segregating actions and human rights violations,” it read. Failing action from the Governor General and the Senate, Bauder said, signatures would be collected to trigger a national vote to remove the government. “So this is just step one of calling for a referendum through Elections Canada,” he said in a livestream.

The document also proposes a citizen’s committee, spearheaded by Canada Unity, that would set policy alongside the Governor General and Senate. He expected to see their signatures on the document. “If they don’t, they’re incriminating themselves,” Bauder said in an interview. He began using the hashtag #SignOrResign

“On Dec. 6, we put the Senate on notice. We are having tens of thousands of people come to Ottawa, in unity, to bear hug this city until the law is restored in our country,” he told followers of Canada Unity.

When Bauder arrived in Ottawa last December, it didn’t go terribly well. “Failure is not an option,” he told his Facebook friends from outside the Rideau Hall grounds one evening. “Standing down is not an option.”

But Bauder was turned away when he and his supporters marched to the Senate building to deliver their memorandum of understanding. He led the crowd instead to a nearby Canada Post office, to drop the document in the mail.

He wouldn’t hear back.

But then the world changed. COVID-19 and growing concern about governments’ response created an opportunity to broaden the movement. Bauder started plotting Operation Bear Hug 2.0, which would become the convoy. The timing was perfect. A political knife fight was brewing over the decision to require truckers to show proof of their COVID-19 vaccination status when crossing the U.S-Canada border.

The organizers started to assemble: King signed on as a road captain for Alberta. In the months prior, he had accused Trudeau of stealing an election and warned his followers to stock up on meat and supplies to prepare for “what’s coming.” Tamara Lich, who had taken on a position with the Western separatist Maverick Party, started an online fundraising campaign to finance the convoy. Benjamin Dichter later joined as a spokesperson, and brought Tom Quiggin along as an unofficial intelligence adviser for the occupation. (Quiggin had recently turned his professional attention to Trudeau’s push for what he baselessly described as a “social credit scoring system, much like Communist China has now.”) In Ottawa, Norman Traversy was part of a “reception committee” for the truck convoy’s arrival.

As plans for the so-called “Freedom Convoy” gained momentum, its leaders made clear that they were in it for the long haul. On a livestream with Bauder, King promised, “We are going to fix our broken country, and I’m not leaving Ottawa until it’s done.” Bauder chimed in: “Neither of us are.” King vowed that “everybody” involved was committed to occupying the capital. “I’m going to live on Wellington Street, right in front of Parliament.”

Jason LaFace, who signed up as a road captain and hosted Canada Unity’s official podcast, promised “when we get to Ottawa, we’re not leaving until Justin Trudeau leaves government and the Liberal government is dissolved.”

Bauder tapped into a well of like-minded support. That included Action4Canada, which had unsuccessfully sued the Canadian government, alleging “a massive and concentrated push for mandatory vaccines of every human on the planet earth with concurrent electronic surveillance” and accused Trudeau of taking part in the plot at the behest of “international Billionaire Oligarchs, and oligarch organizations such as Bill Gates … (and) the World Economic Forum.”

As the days passed, support grew: Donations poured in, from within Canada and beyond, and a network of Facebook pages racked up tens of thousands of new followers.

And unlike Bauder’s previous efforts, dozens of trucks actually set out for Ottawa — from Prince Rupert to St John’s — when the planned departure day, Jan. 22, came around. The online fundraising campaign smashed past $1 million.

The convoy was actually happening.


For some, the convoy’s destination in downtown Ottawa would be a place to commune with like-minded citizens, to make a point but also to lounge in a hot tub, listen to a DJ and play street hockey.

But to Canada’s security establishment, the occupation was anything but fun and games.

On Jan. 27, a bulletin went out from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service’s Integrated Terrorism Assessment Centre with an alarming headline.

“Extremists may attempt to seize the opportunity of public protest,” said the bulletin, which was sent to intelligence, police and first-responder agencies. It warned that several elements had joined the convoy promising civil war, attacks on politicians, and a Canadian version of the Jan. 6 insurrection in Washington.


The centre judged that the protest was likely to be peaceful, but flagged groups and individuals in the growing convoy that espoused “violent anti-authority/anti-government views.”

Indeed, King had once predicted in a video that “Trudeau, someone’s gonna make you catch a bullet someday,” and warned the rest of the House of Commons that somebody would “do ya’s in.” Even before the convoy arrived in Ottawa, King said the point of occupying Ottawa was to terrorize politicians. “What we want to focus on is our politicians — their houses, their locations,” he said.

The leader of a convoy leaving from Quebec was Steeve “L’Artiss” Charland, a former core organizer of far-right militant group La Meute. He announced that his new group, Les Farfadaas, would be heading to Ottawa as well: It would end up occupying a stretch of downtown Gatineau. “We stay here. We’re not going anywhere. We have a free country or we are dead,” he said in an interview.

Tyler Russell, head of the far-right Canada First organization said on a livestream, “When you go in and you see these counterprotesters, you understand who our enemies are, right? … They are complicit in this globalist plan.”

One group that caught the attention of CSIS in particular was Diagolon. Started as a running joke by far-right internet trolls known as the Plaid Army, its founder, Jeremy MacKenzie, insists it is not a militant or extremist group but a “social club.”

But Diagolon members have shared images of Trudeau’s head on a spike. Its members have met in real life, posing with assault-style rifles and shotguns. Its followers have fantasized online about installing themselves in heavily fortified compounds, out of reach of the state. MacKenzie has frequently alluded to a coming race war, and has adopted the catchphrase “gun or rope,” referring to methods of executing the ideological opponents of their aspirational state.

Before the trucks set out for Ottawa, MacKenzie promised in a video that they would “block up the city, and not leave until either the mandates are lifted, and/or the entire government resigns. It’s going to cause food shortages, parts shortages, industrial shortages.

“I only got one thing to say to those guys,” he added with a laugh. “Let’s go, Justin. What are you gonna do?”

On a podcast, another Plaid Army member promised “this is gonna be bigger than Oka. This is gonna be bigger than the FLQ and the October Crisis.”

And despite their more radical tone, they were motivated by the same conspiracy theories as the convoy’s organizers. In a mid-February livestream, MacKenzie warned his listeners not to trust promises from the Conservative party to repeal vaccination mandates. “Are they? Or are they gonna just replace them with a digital ID they’re gonna roll out here for the UN and Klaus Schwab?” he asked. MacKenzie would be regularly spotted on the streets of Ottawa during the occupation.

The government intelligence assessment rated a co-ordinated terror attack or storming of Parliament as unlikely, but warned that “a dedicated group of protesters” could “prolong their protest in Ottawa and/or seek interaction with Canadian politicians” — a warning that many critics say Ottawa Police failed to take seriously.

Organizers framed the demonstration as a protest against COVID-19 vaccination mandates and lockdowns, a cause within the mainstream of Canadian opinion. Support from some leading Conservative politicians seemed to lend credibility to that idea. But even during the occupation, darker motivating beliefs were apparent.



The protest teemed with outstretched arms wielding cellphones, broadcasting live — to Facebook, Twitter, TikTok, but also to alternative social media sites Bitchute and Rumble. Occupiers, and their supporters back home, essentially had a 24-hour news network — by occupiers, for occupiers. One of the most omnipresent of those streamers was former People’s Party candidate Laura-Lynn Tyler Thompson. She had amassed a considerable social media following by promoting, among others, Norman Traversy and firebrand pastor Henry Hildebrandt, an ardent opponent of mask and physical distancing requirements.

“Have you seen the video where Klaus Schwab is admitting that they hand-picked Trudeau, and they have used him to destroy our nation?” Thompson said. Hildebrandt nodded, emphatically interjecting with “Yes! Yes!” Hildebrandt regularly led prayer sessions in front of Parliament, vowing to return God to the House of Commons.

Intense interest from abroad made minor celebrities of the convoy leaders. Dichter, who became a regular face on Fox News, offered his thoughts on the World Economic Forum in a YouTube interview. “Klaus Schwab — I jokingly say, well, for the third time we have a left-wing German who’s going to save the world. What could go wrong?” he said, adding that “we live in a society where these people, globally, are trying to institute policy, so it seems, to prop up the degenerates and cause conflict.”

Quiggin began producing daily “intelligence reports” that warned that the federal government was launching an “‘information operation’ in order to provoke civil disobedience and violence.” He included a list of prominent Canadians who “are members of the World Economic Forum.”

As the scrutiny ramped up, some of the organizers tried to distance themselves from controversial statements that were jeopardizing their fundraising efforts. That proved difficult in the case of someone like Pat King, who was mobbed by supporters wherever he went. When King put out a call for trucks to join him in a slow roll to the airport, which also happened to be a police staging area, dozens of trucks signed up. “When Trudeau goes to jail, he can have all the mandates he wants,” he told a livestream.

Norman Traversy said he would be restarting his plan to have Trudeau arrested and prosecuted. But for the time being, he was delegating responsibilities from inside one of the occupation’s “command centres” in a downtown hotel. “There’s no boss of this group,” he said.

Dichter told a news conference much the same. “Because this is so organic, there are many people in different groups that have latched on to the movement,” he said.

It was becoming apparent that this wasn’t going to end well.

In Ottawa, police were confronted with a situation far removed from the peaceful, fun-loving party the occupiers described.

“Members of racialized, faith-based, LGBTQ communities were threatened and verbally harassed on a regular basis,” said Ottawa Police Interim Chief Bell. When officers tried to stop the flow of fuel canisters into the downtown core, the occupiers would “swarm our officers, threaten them, to the point that they couldn’t do their job.”

Policing sources say a significant factor in the city’s unwillingness to clear the occupation sooner turned on what was present in the trucks, and what the occupiers’ true intentions were.

Those fears proved prescient in other parts of the country. On Feb. 14, four men were arrested in Coutts, Alta., the scene of a border protest, and charged with conspiracy to commit murder; a significant weapons cache was seized. The RCMP alleged that the four men had plans to kill Mounties and members of the public. The Diagolon patch was sewn into some of the seized body armour and one of the men arrested was reported by Anti-Hate Canada to be “head of security” for MacKenzie’s so-called “social club.” MacKenzie would ask his followers to pray for the men arrested, saying, “we haven’t heard from them.” He would later deny knowing any of the men accused.

A source with knowledge of the emergency response said there were serious fears within the Ottawa Police Service that someone was leaking operational information to the occupiers — perhaps even giving them access to encrypted radio channels. Bell would only say there are “very serious allegations” against a “very small group” of officers who were affiliated with the occupation.

The Star spoke to one officer, on leave without pay for refusing to get vaccinated, who visited the occupation but vehemently denied leaking information to the occupiers. “I have never seen Canada more unified,” he said.

Concerns of a mole were raised again when, after police moved in to clear the encampments, the logs of an RCMP group chat were posted to Telegram by Jeremy MacKenzie.

On Valentine’s Day, Trudeau announced that he had decided to invoke the Emergencies Act.

The announcement sent shock waves across the country, reviving memories of his father’s use of the War Measures Act during the FLQ Crisis. The updated law’s powers, however, were far less expansive. They enabled Ottawa to freeze bank accounts, forbid entry to certain areas, and press tow trucks into service.

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino told the Star there was a series of “inflection points” before that decision was made, but said the foiling of the alleged plot to kill RCMP officers “revealed the extent to which some of these individuals were, potentially, willing to go.”

Even if they were convinced that using emergency powers was necessary, the politicians remained nervous, Mendicino says. “We almost collectively held our breath when we invoked the Emergencies Act, because we know it could only take one person to set off a series of events that could result in mass casualties and damage.”



On the morning of Friday, Feb. 18, the occupiers emerged on the streets expecting a police operation. As Ottawa police and their reinforcements got into place — armoured assault vehicles moved into position, tactical units readied for the operation, tow trucks pouring into the city, ambulances idling nearby — the occupiers steeled themselves with a mix of preparation and delusion. They wielded shovels and got to work on some freshly fallen snow, building makeshift barricades in front of their lines.

Before the operation began downtown, police picked up the organizers, one by one. Pat King’s Facebook livestream was interrupted by police pulling over his vehicle.

Rather than use the more aggressive crowd control methods seen in recent years at protests in Toronto and Montreal, Ottawa police opted for a measured approach. Every 15 minutes, give or take, the line of officers would announce their intent to step forward — and they would. Most occupiers dutifully stepped back. A smaller contingent of occupiers tried to resist, with some trying to wrestle officers to the ground. Police would grab those people, pull them behind the line, and handcuff them.

Of the thousands of occupiers who remained in the city’s core when police moved in, just 230 were arrested. Of those, only 118 people were charged criminally.

It would take more than 24 hours before the entire downtown core was retaken. Over the course of the operation, police employed pepper spray and non-lethal projectiles — which can include beanbag rounds — but did not fire tear gas or more dangerous projectiles.

Fears that there weapons inside some of the trucks proved prescient: A police source said loaded shotguns were found. (While truckers can legally transport registered firearms in their vehicles, guns must be securely stowed and are not permitted to be loaded.)

Mendicino says it was “nothing short of miraculous” that nobody was seriously injured.

The occupation of Ottawa was a “wake-up call,” Mendicino says. The city’s police force deals with an enormous number of protests every year, Bell said, but “this one was different.”

And the attempt to link debate over legitimate public health measures with conspiracy theories — about vaccines, about the World Economic Forum, about a dire threat to Canadian sovereignty — have sparked concern about what could come next.

“The people who organized that protest, and there were several factions there, there’s no doubt [they] came to overthrow the government,” Jody Thomas, national security adviser to the prime minister, said earlier in March.

“This is a problem that is not going away.”

Mendicino says the chaotic month proved that “the tools and laws we have on our books aren’t effective enough” at dealing with this type of movement. He hinted that his government was considering making some permanent legal changes to supply police with some of these powers, although he didn’t specify what that would look like.

Some of those who enabled this occupation won’t be part of whatever that new movement looks like. King and Lich were both arrested and charged with criminal offences; King’s attempts to be released on bail are ongoing, while Lich’s bail terms prohibit her from participating in demonstrations. Dichter has re-emerged in the world of bitcoin, leveraging his experience sourcing donations that are beyond government’s grasp. Quiggin continues his podcast, turning his attention in recent weeks to the conflict in Ukraine. Once he recovered his RV from a city impound lot, Bauder headed west; by early March, he had reached Victoria, where a rump of the Ottawa occupiers set their sights on the B.C. government, occupying the legislature grounds in the provincial capital.

The movement has now outgrown the former organizers. Sympathetic social media channels continue to expand. Groups like Diagolon are recruiting new members. The conspiracy theorists that propelled this movement proliferate online. Some demonstrators no doubt returned from Ottawa satisfied, believing that they had made their point. But others came back armed with dangerous lessons. As one put it on a recent livestream: “Violence in some way, shape, or form is the only way these people are going to respond.”

TORONTO STAR
Justin Ling is a freelance reporter
Freedom Convoy protest cost city of Ottawa $36.6 million
Hundreds of trucks remain parked on Wellington Street and surrounding streets in downtown Ottawa on day 10 of the "Freedom Convoy" demonstration in downtown Ottawa. (Josh Pringle/CTV News Ottawa)

Josh Pringle
CTV News Ottawa Digital Multi-Skilled Journalist
Updated March 18, 2022 

The 'Freedom Convoy' protest that occupied downtown Ottawa streets for more than three weeks this winter cost the city of Ottawa and Ottawa police more than $36 million.

City Manager Steve Kanellakos provided an update to council on the costs associated with the "illegal convoy occupation" as of Feb. 28.

Kanellakos says the Ottawa police response cost $35 million, including money for the RCMP deployment in the capital.

"Costs include compensation, vehicle expenses, food, accommodations, and operation supplies," Kanellakos said.

The city of Ottawa's response, including Bylaw Services and public works, is $1.3 million. Kanellakos says the costs do not include any damage/repair estimates for infrastructure.

"City staff and OPS staff are communicating with senior officials at the federal and provincial governments to recover these costs and will make a formal submission for reimbursement of all costs associated with the response," Kanellakos said in a memo to council.

Kanellakos told council last month that he had been speaking with deputy ministers within the federal government on possible funding to cover the costs of the protests.

"They certainly are expecting that we would be submitting the cost of both the federal and provincial, and what I was told is they would work out what an appropriate cost-sharing agreement is to fund us," Kanellakos said, adding Mayor Jim Watson has been speaking with Ontario cabinet ministers.

The 'Freedom Convoy' rolled into Ottawa the weekend of Jan. 28 to protest COVID-19 vaccine mandates and other public health measures. The demonstration blocked Wellington Street and several roads around Parliament Hill for more than three weeks, forcing several businesses to close.

Ottawa police, with assistance from the RCMP, OPP and municipal police forces across the country, moved in the weekend of February 18, 19 and 20 to remove demonstrators from streets and reopen roads.

POST CONVOY PROTESTS CONTINUE

Court grants immediate injunction on Beltline protests in Calgary against public health 

Police say intelligence indicates there may be an imminent

public safety risk

Protesters and police have clashed in Calgary’s Beltline in recent weeks. On Friday the City of Calgary said it was granted a temporary court injunction to address protesters in the area. (Helen Pike/CBC)

The City of Calgary has been granted a temporary court injunction to help address protests in the city's Beltline area against public health measures.

An Alberta Court of Queen's Bench justice granted an immediate injunction that will address protests in the Beltline and elsewhere in Calgary, the city said in an emailed statement.

The injunction prohibits ongoing violations of existing bylaws and legislation, and reinforces and clarifies enforcement authority.

The injunction prohibits blocking traffic on roads and sidewalks, walking in the middle of roadways, preventing vehicles and pedestrians from lawfully passing by or accessing amenities in the area, without authorization or permit. 

It also prohibits conducting activity in a park that unreasonably disturbs the use or enjoyment of the park for other users of the park, or hosting an event or using an amplification system in a park without a permit, and commercial activity within a park. It also applies to the unnecessary sounding of horns or other audible warning devices. 

However, community protests and events are still allowed to occur if they comply with bylaw requirements and secure appropriate permits, the city said. 

Read the temporary court injunction: 

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Police aware of protesters with links to white supremacy groups 

"There will be no marching tomorrow, there will be no mobile protest, and there will be nobody behaving that way down in the Beltline," police Chief Mark Neufeld said Friday during a special meeting between the Calgary Police Service and the Calgary Police Commission.

The injunction means that instead of officers doing bylaw enforcement, which would result in a ticket, if police see anyone doing any of the actions prohibited by the injunction, the offenders could go "directly to jail," Neufeld said.

Earlier this week, the police comission said ticketing organizers and attendees has proven "ineffective" in prior anti-mandate protests. 

Police also warned the public that their intelligence indicates there may be an imminent public safety risk at future demonstrations. Neufeld also said they are aware that there have been protesters with links to white supremacist groups. 

Police say the protest size has changed over recent months. In the beginning of 2022, there were about 300 people attending protests. In February, that number grew to between 2,000 and 5,000. At the end of February and early March, there were 1,300. 

Protesters, counter-protesters say they're going ahead

Protests in Calgary against COVID-19 public health restrictions started nearly two years ago.

They have continued in the Beltline and Central Memorial Park each week, despite the fact that most of the province's mandates have been lifted. In recent weeks, counter-protesters have started demonstrating in the area at the same time. 

Community Solidarity YYC, which has represented counter-protesters in the Beltline, tweeted that the group plans to peacefully assemble.

Jake Eskesen, who has been attending Beltline protests, said in an email to CBC that anti-mandate protesters will not be deterred by the injunction.

'There are consequences for breaking the law'

"[This] now is a really important warning shot to the people who are engaged in these kinds of protests that there are legal consequences for what's happening," said Doug King, professor of justice studies at Mount Royal University.

"There are consequences for breaking the law while engaged in a peaceful protest." 

Violating a court order is a Criminal Code offence, King said, which could lead to six months incarceration, plus the potential of a $5,000 fine.

King, who lives near the area, said that since the Coutts border blockade and simultaneous protests in Ottawa, the Beltline demonstrations have become increasingly aggressive. 

Police chief says he has regrets 

Police commission chair Shawn Cornett said work will ramp up after this weekend: "We need to look at what has gone on, what we've done, have we been doing the things that we needed to do? There's lots of discussions to happen." 

In an column penned by Neufeld for the Calgary Herald, the police chief said he regrets that "we find ourselves in a place where Beltline residents feel unsafe and unsupported in their community."  

"I also regret that despite ongoing efforts to come to a diplomatic resolution with some protest groups — something we have done for years in our city — we are now in a place where this situation must be resolved in less subtle ways," Neufeld wrote. 

Neighbourhood association pleased with injunction

The Beltline Neighbourhoods Association said they are pleased to see the temporary court injunction as a tool to help Calgary law enforcement respond to the demonstrations. 

"We are hopeful that this allows our community to return to being the vibrant, safe, and welcoming place it was before these aggressive demonstrations." 

With files from Colleen Underwood


Freedom protest moved to city hall, police monitor situation at Calgary park

Michael Franklin
CTVNewsCalgary.ca Senior Digital Producer
Published March 19, 2022 

A mass protest scheduled to take place in Calgary's Central Memorial Park on Saturday has moved out of the neighbourhood, resettling on the steps of Calgary city hall.

The rally, organized by a group calling itself Calgary Freedom Central, was supposed to take place at the park at 1 p.m., but CTV News crews found the gathering that had met in the park for the past several weekend never materialized there.

Instead, it took place outside city hall, where people waved flags and listened to speakers as police looked on.

It was a massive show of force from the Calgary Police Service, however, as hundreds of members were mobilized at the scene to keep the peace.

A group of counter-protesters, made up of Beltline residents who were tired of the ongoing demonstrations, also showed up at the scene, but they marched to Central Memorial Park.

Once there, they engaged with a handful of freedom protesters while police stood between them.




COURT INJUNCTION

The change in tone comes after a temporary court injunction was granted Friday and a resolution from the Calgary Police Service that says it will enforce those rules.

Following a meeting of the Calgary Police Commission, Chief Mark Neufeld said "there will be no marching" on Saturday.

"Residents will see a significant police presence," he said Friday afternoon.

"There will be nobody behaving that way on the Beltline."

The order says that anyone who blocks roads or sidewalks could be charged and potentially arrested.

The same threat applies to anyone accused of excessive noise or conducting commercial activity in parks without proper permits.

The rules come after a group of Beltline residents, fed up with the weeks of freedom rallies in their communities, organized a counter-protest on March 12 that turned ugly.


CHANGE IN MESSAGING

The freedom protesters, who had long fought against the COVID-19 public health restrictions imposed on Albertans and Canadians, also seemed to sing a different tune during this latest protest.

Instead of speaking about the unfairness of restrictions, many of them turned their attention back to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his Liberal government.

Last week, Premier Jason Kenney called out the protesters for their criticism of COVID-19 rules even though Alberta had virtually none to speak of.

"I would suggest that maybe people could find more productive ways of expressing their frustration, but maybe here’s an idea – how about we all just move on from the frustration of COVID?" said Kenney last week.

"How about we leave it in the rear view mirror?"

 


‘Several arrests’ as protestors and counter-protesters meet in Beltine District

Protesters moved to city hall from Central Memorial Park Mar. 19, 2022. Global Newst

Protesters and counter-protesters gathered in the Beltline district Saturday for the first time since the city was granted an emergency injunction.


About 350 people gathered around 1 p.m. at Central Memorial Park in protest of medical mandates across Canada. After some speeches, the crowd — known as Group A in Calgary police tweets — began to move, making their way to city hall, a few blocks away.

Protesters gathered at Central Memorial Park in Calgary Mar. 19, 2022. Courtesy: Delta Tech Calgary

Police told Global News at that point the protesters were not in violation of an emergency injunction put in place Friday afternoon, because they were staying on the sidewalk.

READ MORE: Justice grants City of Calgary temporary injunction against downtown protests

Around 2 p.m., police tweeted, saying Macleod Trail would be temporarily closed in front of Municipal Plaza to allow for crowds to cross safely.

Minutes later, CPS said the group had breached the injunction when they obstructed the roadway. As of 2:19 p.m. police said they had cleared the roadway and traffic was moving again.

(20) Adam MacVicar on Twitter: “Here’s the scene at City Hall right now. #YYC @GlobalCalgary https://t.co/gkGooChSvR” / Twitter

Dustin Nolan was among those who joined the anti-mandate protest. He said he felt compelled to show up.

“I think it’s very sad, because we have the right as Canadians to peacefully protest and gather like this and express our feelings and our thoughts towards everything, so the fact that they are trying to tell us we can’t is wrong,” Nolan said.

“I just think it’s wrong what the government is doing mandating vaccines. I can’t get on a plane to go see my family across Canada right now. It’s hard. I’d like to go visit people and travel and I can’t just because of my views.”

“I realize there are some people here with some strange views that I don’t agree with,” said Doug Tweet, another protester who gathered at CMP/city hall.

“There’s lots of conspiracy theories which I don’t agree with but I just agree with freedom.”

Counter protesters had gathered at nearby Lougheed House, but some made their way to Central Memorial Park, where police worked to keep the two sides apart.

Around 4 p.m., police said they made several arrests. Details are expected to be released later.

Continued protests

Anti-mandate demonstrations have been held weekly at Central Memorial Park, typically followed by a march down 17th Avenue.

Last weekend, area residents and others tried to “take back the community” and the two groups clashed in what police saw as a public safety issue. Police were seen in online videos physically moving some of the residents using their service bikes.

Calgary police chief addresses response to weekend Beltline protests

The situation led to an outcry from residents, a special city council meeting, a letter to the police commission from the mayor and, finally, an emergency injunction by the city on Friday afternoon.

Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek said on Twitter last weekend that the disruption, which she called a parade and festival without proper permits and licences, needed enforcement by police rather than crowd control.

READ MORE: Calgary mayor calling for police enforcement against continued COVID restriction protests

“This was a damned if you do and damned if don’t, no-win for the police,” police Chief Mark Neufeld said Monday.

The injunction strengthens police authority to enforce the law.

“This is the exact tool we need as we all work together to return a sense of normalcy to the Beltline community,” Neufeld said in a news release Friday.

Both city council and the police commission have said they received hundreds of emails and phone calls from Calgarians about the protests in recent weeks.

READ MORE: Ottawa’s crackdown on ‘freedom convoy’ finances created panic, confusion, MPs hear

A letter to the police commission from the mayor laid out some of those concerns.

“The level of noise from protester’s vehicle horns and chanting is negatively impacting quality of life,” Gondek wrote.

She noted residents, many of whom live in one- or two-bedroom condos or apartments, have been leaving the area to avoid feeling trapped in their homes on Saturday afternoons. Others have reported being harassed for wearing masks.

Businesses have reported lost income as customers flee the area before the protests begin.

Click to play video: 'Trucker protests: GoFundMe rep says discussions with Ottawa police led to suspension of fundraiser'Trucker protests: GoFundMe rep says discussions with Ottawa police led to suspension of fundraiser

— with files from The Canadian Press

Police arrest six people at anti-vaccine,
freedom protest in downtown Calgary


CALGARY — Police arrested several people at a so-called freedom protest in downtown Calgary on Saturday after some demonstrators refused to leave a park that has become ground zero in the city for the weekly rallies.


Calgary Police Service Chief Mark Neufeld said five people were charged with breaching an injunction, with one of them facing an additional charge of assaulting a police officer. And a sixth person was arrested on an outstanding warrant.

"These efforts will continue as we work together to bring peace back to the Beltline and the surrounding communities here in Calgary," Neufeld told a news conference just after suppertime.

By then, the park had emptied and few police remained on the scene.

"This was not an issue that developed in one day or one weekend and it's not one that's going to be completely resolved in one day or one weekend," Neufeld said, adding additional charges are expected.

One man was taken to the ground by multiple officers shortly after mounted units and police with bicycles began pushing people to the outskirts of Central Memorial Park in the Beltline neighbourhood.

Another man sat on a park bench and refused to leave. He was handcuffed in front of a crowd of hundreds with many holding signs against COVID-19 health measures.

Earlier, a group of about 1,000 people converged at the park before taking the protest to city hall. Police forced demonstrators back from roadways so traffic could move.

"They can't stop us," said a speaker over a megaphone.

Another said, "They're not going to scare me away. I am not fearful just like you are not fearful. Keep standing up."

Some people waved upside-down Canadian flags, Alberta flags and at least one Gadsden flag — a yellow banner with a snake reading "don't tread on me," which is sometimes used in support of far-right ideology.

Others carried signs that read "Freedom not Farce" and "No Mask or Vax Mandates."

Hours later, a portion of the group marched to the park where they were met with heavy police enforcement.

The group has typically marched down 17th Avenue, a popular street with restaurants, bars and stores. Last weekend, local residents clashed with protesters there in what police described as a public safety issue.

The ongoing weekend protests have led to an outcry from residents, a special city council meeting, a letter to the police commission from the mayor and an emergency injunction by the city on Friday.

The injunction strengthens police authority to enforce the law.

Premier Jason Kenney was asked to comment on the protests earlier Saturday while on his new weekly phone-in radio show on CHQR and CHED.

He said he didn't know why there were still protests, because Alberta removed its COVID-19 restrictions weeks ago.

Kenney suggested people could instead demonstrate at McDougall Centre, the provincial government's offices in Calgary, or the Harry Hays building, where the federal government offices are located.

"If you're upset about the federal travel vaccine mandates — so am I — go in front of there," he said. "You can make your point without inconveniencing people in that neighbourhood."

Both city council and the police commission have said they received hundreds of emails and phone calls from Calgarians about the protests in recent weeks.

The letter to the police commission from Mayor Jyoti Gondek laid out some of those concerns.

"The level of noise from protester's vehicle horns and chanting is negatively impacting quality of life," she wrote.

Gondek noted residents, many of whom live in one- or two-bedroom condos or apartments, have been leaving the area to avoid feeling trapped in their homes on Saturday afternoons. Others have reported being harassed for wearing masks.

Businesses have reported lost income as customers have been leaving the area before the protests begin.

Dan Murray, who owns I Love You Coffee Shop in the Beltline, said the protests started about 18 months ago and grew "worse and worse" after truckers took over Canada's capital city.

The demonstration at Parliament Hill lasted about three weeks until Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked the federal Emergencies Act. More than 100 people were charged with various offences between Feb. 17 and 18.

Peter Oliver, president of the Beltline Neighbourhoods Association, said the protests have turned into a "real toxic mix" that include white supremacists and other extremists.

"We have a serious problem here," he said earlier this week.

"It's a whole buffet of different losers."

— With files from Rob Drinkwater in Edmonton.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published on March 19, 2022.

Alanna Smith and Colette Derworiz, The Canadian Press

Charges against 6 Hamilton encampment activists withdrawn, with all agreeing to peace-bond terms

Withdrawal comes after months of public campaigning for

charges to be dropped

A video shared on social media by the Hamilton Centre for Civic Inclusion showed several protesters being arrested outside of the central police station on Nov. 26. (Hamilton Centre for Civic Inclusion/Twitter)

The charges against six activists arrested in connection to an encampment eviction at J.C. Beemer Park in November were withdrawn on Monday in a Hamilton court. 

The six agreed to enter into peace bonds that prevent them from crossing police caution tape, interfering with police operations related to unhoused people, and participating in illegal or violent demonstrations.

They could face criminal charges if they breach those terms before the peace bond expires Nov. 24, exactly a year after the encampment eviction at J.C. Beemer.

The group's lawyer, Dean Paquette, said the agreement with the Crown to withdraw the charges came "as a result of considerable discussion," and that those who contravene the peace bond's terms could be charged with breach of a court order.

The withdrawal comes after months of public support for the charges to be dropped by several organizations and community leaders, including the Hamilton Centre for Civic Inclusion, Afro Canadian Caribbean Association, the Hamilton and District Labour Council, Hamilton Centre MP Matthew Green, Beaches-East York MPP Rima Berns-McGown and others. 

A statement issued Monday by Hamilton Encampment Support Network (HESN), the group that organized the J.C. Beemer demonstration, says the arrests and resulting court process have been "incredibly difficult for those involved.

"We were arrested, brutalized and threatened with significant amounts of jail time for supporting our unhoused neighbours," says the statement on behalf of those who were initially charged including Jordan Grace, Rowa Mohamed, Sahra Soudi, Gregory Dongen, Sarah Jama and Ezra Amos.

"While we feel that dropping the charges was the best outcome, and couldn't be happier with this win, it is disturbing to know that no plans for action or significant policy change have been taken by the City of Hamilton to stop encampment evictions."

An update to Hamilton city councillors following a public works meeting on Jan. 26 showed 262 "encampment cleanups" were completed last year alone — 176 of which were done by the city and another 86 completed by a contractor.

A review of work orders showed those operations happened at 60 unique sites, the update stated, and that there were multiple visits made to the same sites.

Charges related to J.C. Beemer Park eviction

The charges dropped Monday were related to an encampment eviction on Nov. 24 and a subsequent protest at the central police station on Nov. 26. 

According to a statement of facts read in court, police were in the park Nov. 24 after a fire had engulfed two tents and damaged a hydro line. "Hydro crews were not able to assess and repair the damage if encampment residents remained in the park and the situation was deemed unsafe," the statement said. 

It said police created a taped-off area to allow hydro crews to work but then "demonstrators, including five of the six defendants, broke through the police tape, at which time the police immediately responded and physically took custody of two of the defendants restraining them, resulting in a physical encounter between police and the defendants, as well as other HESN activists. No party was seriously injured because of the altercation."

"Each accused accepts responsibility for their actions."

Police and the city said the encampment area at J.C. Beemer Park was not safe after a fire tore through several tents. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

A sixth person was charged based on actions at a protest two days later, demanding the release of one of the Beemer Park defendants, at the police force's central station. The statement of facts says protesters were ordered off police property.

"A physical altercation took place between the demonstrators and the police. A number of people... ran back onto the property, escalating the confrontation and eventually interacting physically with a police officer leading to Amos being grounded and arrested."

Defendant called process 'damaging'

The defendant arrested at the police station that day said Monday they were shocked to hear the agreed-upon statement of facts for the first time. 

Amos later told CBC Hamilton that they don't believe they crossed a police line or escalated the situation, and alleged that they were initially arrested mistaken for another protester. 

They also alleged police choked them and slammed them to the ground when they were arrested. "My handcuffs were so tight, I still have scars on my wrist," said Amos, who identifies as non-binary and uses the pronouns they/them.

Once inside the station, Amos alleges they were searched by six male officers with no female present, and were told their clothes would be cut off if they kept struggling. They said they were not given the option to specify their gender and were eventually put into a cell with men.

Amos says they agreed to the facts Monday "to keep the peace," saying the process so far has already been "damaging on so many levels" — partially because the lack of gender sensitivity they have encountered.

On Monday, Justice Amanda Joy Camara used female pronouns and Amos's birth name several times during the hearing, despite the court learning Amos's preferred name shortly after proceedings began. 

"At pretty much every level of the system, my identity has been disregarded and oppressed," said Amos, a visual artist who has since moved out of the city because of what happened and is currently crowd-funding for therapy. "I know that people expect [the dropping of charges] to be a celebration but I don't feel this comes anywhere close."

'They took responsibility': police chief

The Special Investigations Unit (SIU) investigated a separate reported injury related to the arrests but closed the case in January, saying it did not meet the criteria for a "serious injury" within the mandate of the SIU.

In an interview Monday afternoon with CBC Hamilton, police chief Frank Bergen said he encourages Amos to file a complaint with the Office of the Independent Police Review Director about their concerns with their arrest.

"That doesn't seem to be consistent with what we know about that interaction," he said, noting it is not a Hamilton police tactic to cut the clothes off someone who is being searched.

He said the force is constantly striving to do better in its interactions with gender diverse and trans people.

"That's part of what we do every day when we look at our policies and procedures, that in fact we are capturing pronouns... We are absolutely current and continue to learn, to do better, with every interaction."

Rowa Mohamed, right, spoke about her arrest at J.C. Beemer Park during a media conference held by the Hamilton Encampment Support Network in late November. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

As for the charges, Bergen said police had been working with the Crown to resolve the matter for some time. 

"What people had to recognize right from the very beginning, this is up to the five or six people involved," he said. "You can't impose a resolution on people if they're not willing to accept it. They took responsibility for their actions and that is part of the role."

Charges 'not in the public interest': activist

The agreement to withdraw the charges came the same day HESN rallied supporters to try to stop what they said was an expected encampment eviction on Linden Street. Later in the day however, they said on Twitter that the tear-down had been called off.

It also followed months of campaigning for the charges to be dropped, by HESN and several other community organizations, in addition to calls for a judicial inquiry into police actions during the arrests and for an end to encampment evictions. 

Jordan Grace, one of those arrested at the park, says he believes the charges were withdrawn at least partially because of the public support, and because "it was clearly not in the public interest to move forward with charges against us… The people who got arrested are people who are dedicated community members and volunteers. We were definitely victims of an overreaction by the police."

He says he couldn't help but compare his arrest with those last month of the anti-mandate convoy members in Ottawa, where some arrests occurred after weeks of occupying public space and complaints of noise and harassment.

He said the response of city council and police to homelessness is disingenuous and called their policies "inadequate and dysfunctional." 

The reason HESN takes the encampment issue so seriously, he said, is because many of its members have experienced poverty themselves.

"For us, it's a life-or-death situation," he said.

with files from Dan Taekema