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Canada’s capital starts cleanup after weeks-long protest

Demonstrators had used hundreds of trucks and vehicles to block the city since Jan 28, prompting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to invoke rarely used emergency powers.

Reuters
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Vehicles block a road during a protest by truck drivers over pandemic health rules and the Trudeau government, outside the parliament of Canada in Ottawa on Feb 15. Photo: AFP
Vehicles block a road during a protest by truck drivers over pandemic health rules and the Trudeau government, outside the parliament of Canada in Ottawa on Feb 15. Photo: AFP

Canadian police on Sunday smashed the windows of vehicles abandoned in the downtown core of the capital to tow them away, and city workers cleaned up trash after two days of tense standoffs and 170 arrests ended a three-week occupation of Ottawa.

Demonstrators had used hundreds of trucks and vehicles to block the city since Jan 28, prompting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to invoke rarely used emergency powers.

There were a few stragglers on Sunday packing up a logistics depot the so-called “Freedom Convoy” had set up in a parking lot near the highway to supply the protesters camped out in the city centre.

“We were running support for the convoy and the people in the downtown core – food, fuel, basic necessities,” said Winton Marchant, a retired firefighter from Windsor, Ontario. “This was the base camp and we are cleaning up.”

The protesters initially wanted an end to cross-border Covid-19 vaccine mandates for truck drivers, but the blockade turned into a demonstration against Trudeau and the government.

On Saturday, police used pepper spray and stun grenades to move out the die-hard protesters who remained, clearing most of the area in front of parliament. Others abandoned their positions in other parts of the downtown area during the night.

“We continue to maintain a police presence in and around the area the unlawful protest occupied. We are using fences to ensure the ground gained back is not lost,” police said on Twitter.

For the first time in weeks, there was only snow and silence downtown. The trucks blaring their horns were gone. One resident said he felt relief.

“We seem to have gotten over the hump,” Ottawa resident Tim Abray told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. But Abray, a communications consultant, said the political division will not go away so easily.

Several TV reporters were harassed, insulted, threatened and even pushed by protesters, both in Ottawa and in British Columbia, where a group shut down a border crossing south of Vancouver on Saturday.

Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne condemned the treatment of journalists on Twitter, calling it “profoundly disturbing”.

Trudeau on Monday invoked emergency powers to give his government wider authority to stop the protests, including sweeping powers to freeze the accounts of those suspected of supporting the blockades, without obtaining a court order.

Parliament continued debate over the use of the emergency powers on Sunday, with a required vote and expected passage of the powers due on Monday.