May 28, 2024

Protest organizers dig in and say only politicians can clear Ottawa’s downtown | CBC News

Some of the organizers of the protest that’s brought noise, traffic problems and harassment to downtown Ottawa say they have empathy for the city’s residents, but insist there’s no other way to end all COVID-19 public health mandates across Canada.

The protest has seen vehicles parked and honking on roads leading to Parliament Hill since Friday, with widespread reports of threats and harassment in the area. Ottawa police have said they’ve chosen not to step in when they see laws being broken because the threat of violence is too high. They announced two arrests Tuesday.

Crowds swelled to between 5,000 to 18,000 people on Saturday, according to police, with the city estimating another 3,000 came to the Hill on Sunday. Police said Tuesday night that 250 people remained, without offering a vehicle count.

The scope of the road closures and size of the area the city says to avoid have dropped since Saturday, but still take up swaths of both residential and business districts. Many businesses and services have chosen to close.

“Our message to the citizens of Ottawa is one of empathy,” wrote Chris Barber, who said he’s a senior convoy leader in a Wednesday morning news release.

“We understand your frustration and genuinely wish there was another way for us to get our message across, but the responsibility for your inconvenience lies squarely on the shoulders of politicians who have [preferred] to vilify and call us names rather than engage in respectful, serious dialogue.”

The release states protesters “plan to remain in Ottawa ‘for as long as it takes.'”

WATCH | The costs of the protest for the city:

Parliament Hill protest costing city $1M per day

City officials say the protests outside Parliament Hill are costing roughly $1 million per day and the mayor is looking at ways to recover those costs, including a potential lawsuit against GoFundMe. 2:05

In that news release, some of its organizers repeated their goal of staying put until all COVID-19 orders by all governments across Canada have ended.

They didn’t mention one faction’s demand that government leaders resign if they won’t end these mandates, nor the specific changes to cross-border truck vaccination rules they focused on earlier in their convoy.

Ottawa’s mayor and Ontario’s premier have said it’s time for the protestors to leave. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said he’s not going to meet with protesters, nor be intimidated with changing course on his government’s pandemic strategy.

Ottawa police have scheduled a media briefing for 2 p.m. ET Wednesday.

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