Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau says convoy will not intimidate him

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Jan, 2022 04:33 PM
  • Trudeau says convoy will not intimidate him

OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he will neither meet with nor be intimidated by the convoy of Canadians he says spent the last few days harassing local businesses, waving Nazi flags and stealing food from the homeless.

Speaking to Canadians from isolation after testing positive for COVID-19 Monday, Trudeau said "freedom of expression, assembly and association are cornerstones of democracy."

"But Nazi symbolism, racist imagery, and desecration of war memorials are not," he said Monday from a location in the National Capital Region that is not being made public for security reasons.

"It is an insult to memory and truth. Hate can never be the answer."

Trudeau and his family were moved Saturday as thousands of people converged all over Ottawa, including some near his official residence on the grounds of Rideau Hall.

On Monday, he said Canadians were "shocked and frankly disgusted" by some of the behaviour of individuals participating in a massive protest in Ottawa over the weekend. He said "it has to stop."

"I want to be very clear: We are not intimidated by those who hurl insults and abuse small-business workers and steal food from the homeless," he said. "We won't give in to those who fly racist flags. We won't cave to those who engage in vandalism or dishonour the memory of our veterans."

Canada Unity, the group behind the convoy, originated during the 2019 pro-pipeline convoy to Ottawa but morphed into an anti-COVID restrictions protest after the pandemic began. It has been holding protests in and around Ottawa for months and demanding Gov. Gen. Mary Simon and the Senate force federal and provincial governments to lift all restrictions, which is a constitutional impossibility.

The vaccine mandate for truckers that took effect on both side of the Canada-U.S. border earlier this month added more fire to the demands and helped trigger the bigger convoy that descended on Ottawa in the last week.

Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole spoke live on Facebook Monday afternoon and said the protesters were motivated by "fear that the world is changing."

"Fear that they will be left behind. Fear that they have no voice in this society. Fear that life will never return to normal."

He also accused Trudeau of fearmongering when there were only "a handful of unacceptable incidents this weekend.”

Those included, he said, people waving hateful flags — including swastikas and the Confederate flag — and reports of people disrespecting the National War Memorial. Those reports included that people urinated on the site and danced on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

Ottawa Police Service is investigating those reports, as well as numerous others. An Ottawa homeless shelter said Saturday that one of its clients was assaulted by convoy participants, who also entered their facility and threatened and intimidated staff into serving them food.

The Ottawa Paramedic Association reported that paramedics asked for police escorts after rocks were hurled at an ambulance from a truck in the convoy.

Local residents reported witnessing convoy members defecating and urinating in their yards, and one said they came across a protester using their backyard for a bathroom while availing himself of their outdoor outlet to charge his phone.

Several local businesses and workers reported being intimidated by some participants, and many eventually locked their doors and closed for safety reasons.

They remained closed Monday, even as provincial restrictions that had prevented them from any in-person dining were lifted.

Dan Kelly, president of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, said Monday nobody wants lockdown rules eased more than small-business owners but now they can't open because of this protest.

"It is so disappointing to see," Kelly said.

Kelly said a downtown spa owner, who did not want to be identified, was despondent when up to 90 per cent of clients cancelled their bookings for this week out of fear of the protesters.

An elementary school and two city-run daycares downtown were closed Monday for safety reasons, and the Rideau Centre shopping mall remained shuttered for a third day after Canada Unity told convoy members to flood area malls without face masks.

Ottawa City Coun. Catherine McKenney said residents had been resigned to the disruptions on the weekend but are now fed up. Ontario Heritage Minister Lisa MacLeod, who represents an Ottawa riding, said on Twitter Monday it was time for things to end.

"The residents and families of Ottawa need to return to work and school," she wrote. "To the protesters remaining — you’ve been heard — please go home."

The crowds thinned considerably Monday, with a few hundred people outside Parliament Hill, but those that remain say they intend to stay until all COVID-19 restrictions are lifted. That includes vaccine passports and gathering limits, which are the purview of provincial governments.

One convoy leader addressing the crowd Monday said the trucks that have been idling for days along Wellington Street were running low on fuel, but people are being dispatched to bring in jerry cans to keep them going.

Several MPs skirted the protest to attend the first sitting of the House of Commons since mid-December Monday, though most MPs are still participating virtually because of COVID-19.

Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault looked stricken as he spoke of the harassment and intimidation people felt over the weekend. NDP MP Charlie Angus said Ottawa was being held hostage and Quebec Conservative Pierre Paul-Hus said he didn't like what had happened at the National War Memorial.

But Conservative Deputy Leader Candice Bergen said Trudeau was "gaslighting" the protesters, who deserve the chance to be heard. She said the protesters she met with from her home province of Manitoba Sunday are "good people, patriotic, peace-loving."

"They want to be heard," she said, as truck horns blared in the background. "This is not a fringe minority. Although the prime minister might not agree with their views he should be listening to them and giving them some respect."

The protest also triggered some hot tempers and shouting matches during the first question period of 2022 Monday.

Trudeau said during his news conference he will not meet with anyone involved. He said he has attended protests on the Hill in the past, including taking a knee to support the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020. But he said he attends when he agrees with a cause or supports a group's right to express their concerns.

"I have also chosen to not go anywhere near protests that have expressed hateful rhetoric, violence toward fellow citizens, and a disrespect not just of science, but of the front-line health workers and quite frankly, the 90 per cent of truckers who have been doing the right thing to keep Canadians safe, to put food on our tables," he said.

"Canadians know where I stand. This is a moment for responsible leaders to think carefully about where they stand and who they stand with."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

NACI now recommends boosters for some teens

NACI now recommends boosters for some teens
Chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam says kids and adolescents are still at low risk of serious illness in general from COVID-19 but because of the high rate of infection due to Omicron more kids are being admitted to hospital.

NACI now recommends boosters for some teens

Coquitlam Mounties investigate fatal stabbing

Coquitlam Mounties investigate fatal stabbing
They say in a release that the female victim was located Thursday around 4:30 p.m. in an underground parkade in the 1100-block of Austin Avenue. Police say she was rushed to hospital for treatment of stab wounds but was pronounced dead a short time later.

Coquitlam Mounties investigate fatal stabbing

Teck says weather, COVID-19 hitting results

Teck says weather, COVID-19 hitting results
Teck said steelmaking coal sales for the fourth quarter came in at 5.1 million tonnes, below the 5.2 million to 5.7 million tonnes in its revised guidance it issued Dec. 5 after the record rainfall in B.C. that knocked out rail and road infrastructure.

Teck says weather, COVID-19 hitting results

DARPAN 10 with Douglas Porter, Chief Economist, BMO Financial Group

DARPAN 10 with Douglas Porter, Chief Economist, BMO Financial Group
I have been an economist, working on Bay Street in Toronto, since the early 1980s. I now lead a team that provides analysis and forecasts on numerous economic and financial indicators, such as interest rates, economic growth, unemployment, housing, exchange rates, and, of course, inflation. 

DARPAN 10 with Douglas Porter, Chief Economist, BMO Financial Group

Postal workers can wear N95s — with a mask on top

Postal workers can wear N95s — with a mask on top
Some postal service employees doing tasks with a greater risk of catching COVID-19 — for example working in a pair to unload a van inside — are being given N95 masks, but a "fit test by a qualified professional" is required before they can be worn.

Postal workers can wear N95s — with a mask on top

Surprise new documents identified in James case

Surprise new documents identified in James case
Crown prosecutor David Butcher told Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes that he learned of two new sets of documents relevant to the case during an interview Wednesday night with Hilary Woodward, executive financial officer at the legislature.    

Surprise new documents identified in James case