Berliner Boersenzeitung - Canada police set for 'imminent' action to clear trucker protests

EUR -
AED 4.320284
AFN 74.695661
ALL 95.423777
AMD 434.198147
ANG 2.105598
AOA 1079.923359
ARS 1638.385826
AUD 1.623709
AWG 2.117498
AZN 1.995011
BAM 1.952203
BBD 2.370023
BDT 144.652863
BGN 1.962334
BHD 0.444679
BIF 3505.526187
BMD 1.176388
BND 1.489749
BOB 8.130984
BRL 5.771943
BSD 1.176727
BTN 111.33639
BWP 15.745921
BYN 3.323063
BYR 23057.195242
BZD 2.366629
CAD 1.599805
CDF 2723.337207
CHF 0.916217
CLF 0.026913
CLP 1059.207736
CNY 8.035138
CNH 8.013351
COP 4371.655982
CRC 536.908467
CUC 1.176388
CUP 31.174269
CVE 110.062211
CZK 24.336693
DJF 209.543027
DKK 7.473
DOP 70.099223
DZD 155.561424
EGP 61.881181
ERN 17.645813
ETB 183.736386
FJD 2.568644
FKP 0.866553
GBP 0.863698
GEL 3.164322
GGP 0.866553
GHS 13.238552
GIP 0.866553
GMD 85.876577
GNF 10327.926954
GTQ 8.982412
GYD 246.145432
HKD 9.217684
HNL 31.283361
HRK 7.531818
HTG 153.980767
HUF 359.295215
IDR 20405.794248
ILS 3.420988
IMP 0.866553
INR 111.142756
IQD 1541.304665
IRR 1548125.965862
ISK 143.613165
JEP 0.866553
JMD 185.409959
JOD 0.834121
JPY 183.714671
KES 152.04785
KGS 102.840378
KHR 4716.290215
KMF 494.677678
KPW 1058.752873
KRW 1701.445038
KWD 0.362257
KYD 0.980589
KZT 544.903702
LAK 25849.263006
LBP 105375.897599
LKR 376.704323
LRD 215.93123
LSL 19.181477
LTL 3.473566
LVL 0.711586
LYD 7.44834
MAD 10.804393
MDL 20.227645
MGA 4902.94551
MKD 61.522691
MMK 2469.883514
MNT 4211.055
MOP 9.497161
MRU 46.965267
MUR 55.031682
MVR 18.181029
MWK 2040.431843
MXN 20.309895
MYR 4.617331
MZN 75.174346
NAD 19.181558
NGN 1601.227994
NIO 43.300036
NOK 10.900289
NPR 178.138025
NZD 1.971637
OMR 0.452296
PAB 1.176727
PEN 4.105019
PGK 5.116573
PHP 71.462001
PKR 327.865516
PLN 4.232589
PYG 7201.73085
QAR 4.289796
RON 5.258809
RSD 117.395268
RUB 88.052219
RWF 1720.722265
SAR 4.413598
SBD 9.449048
SCR 16.218274
SDG 706.423089
SEK 10.833587
SGD 1.491779
SHP 0.878292
SLE 28.968595
SLL 24668.25343
SOS 672.458141
SRD 44.087443
STD 24348.846389
STN 24.454838
SVC 10.295986
SYP 130.818641
SZL 19.175588
THB 37.872621
TJS 10.996492
TMT 4.123238
TND 3.419001
TOP 2.832459
TRY 53.199541
TTD 7.974274
TWD 36.98503
TZS 3053.823167
UAH 51.593117
UGX 4424.828471
USD 1.176388
UYU 47.282882
UZS 14208.760045
VES 580.540132
VND 30968.401263
VUV 139.108325
WST 3.202815
XAF 654.747848
XAG 0.015343
XAU 0.000251
XCD 3.179246
XCG 2.120783
XDR 0.81927
XOF 654.750626
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.680944
ZAR 19.30199
ZMK 10588.909093
ZMW 22.269873
ZWL 378.796299
  • NGG

    0.6650

    88.305

    +0.75%

  • RIO

    4.4500

    104.95

    +4.24%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    24.18

    +0.33%

  • RYCEF

    1.0500

    17.5

    +6%

  • RBGPF

    0.0800

    63.18

    +0.13%

  • CMSD

    0.0800

    23.37

    +0.34%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.93

    +0.22%

  • BCC

    1.9000

    74.03

    +2.57%

  • BTI

    0.3800

    59.78

    +0.64%

  • RELX

    -0.4400

    35.72

    -1.23%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    13.15

    +0.84%

  • AZN

    2.8400

    184.08

    +1.54%

  • BP

    -1.4900

    45.01

    -3.31%

  • GSK

    0.4350

    50.815

    +0.86%

  • VOD

    0.3000

    16.04

    +1.87%

Canada police set for 'imminent' action to clear trucker protests

Canada police set for 'imminent' action to clear trucker protests

Canadian police were poised Thursday to move against a trucker-led protest that has choked the national capital's streets for three weeks and finally provoked the government into calling on rarely used emergency powers.

Text size:

"Action is imminent," Ottawa police chief Steve Bell told reporters. "I implore anyone that's there: Get in your truck... and leave our city streets."

Criticized for failing to act decisively to end the protests, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau this week invoked the Emergencies Act, which gives the government sweeping powers to deal with a major crisis. It's only the second time such powers have been invoked in peacetime.

The so-called "Freedom Convoy" started with truckers protesting against mandatory Covid vaccines to cross the US border, but its demands have since grown to include an end to all pandemic health rules and, for many, a wider anti-establishment agenda.

At its peak, the movement also included blockades of a half-dozen US-Canada border crossings -- including a key trade route across the Ambassador Bridge between Windsor, Ontario and Detroit, Michigan.

Earlier Thursday, police were deployed in force into the area around the Canadian parliament, where hundreds of big rigs remained parked.

"We've begun to harden the perimeter around the protests," Bell said, adding that access to downtown Ottawa would be restricted for several days to prevent more people joining the demonstration.

"What I can tell you is this weekend will look very different than the past three weekends," he added.

And Trudeau was in the House of Commons, defending his decision to resort to the Emergencies Act.

In response to critics, he said the Act was not being used to call in the military against the protesters, and denied restricting freedom of expression.

The objective was simply to "deal with the current threat and to get the situation fully under control."

"Illegal blockades and occupations are not peaceful protests," Trudeau said, adding: "They have to stop."

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said the situation in Ottawa was "precarious."

The demonstrators had been given an ultimatum late Wednesday by Bell to leave or risk arrest and truck seizures.

In a statement, he pledged "to take back the entirety of the downtown core and every occupied space," while warning that "some of the techniques we are lawfully able and prepared to use are not what we are used to seeing in Ottawa."

Truckers responded by blaring horns through the night and into Thursday. Waving Canadian flags on the ends of hockey sticks, they also chanted, "Freedom!"

One of the protest leaders, Tamara Lich, posted a tearful video to say she was expecting to be arrested. She called on supporters to flood the capital, saying truckers already in place "are gonna stay and fight for your freedom."

"If you can come to Ottawa and stand with us, that would be fantastic," she said.

- Potential for 'terrorism attacks' -

Emergency powers have been invoked in Canada only once before, in 1970 by Trudeau's father, former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, to crush Quebec separatists who'd kidnapped two officials and set off bombs in Montreal.

Calling on truckers to "go home," Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland warned that the penalties for staying "will bite."

"Let me also be clear that we will have zero tolerance for the establishment of new blockades or occupations," she added after a convoy was stopped late Wednesday from re-occupying the Ambassador Bridge.

Officials had announced Wednesday a negotiated peaceful end to the last of the blockades, which Mendicino said had cost the economy billions of dollars.

In documents filed to the Commons, the government laid out its rationale for invoking the Emergencies Act, saying the trucker convoy has created a critical and urgent situation that cannot be dealt with under any other Canadian laws.

It cited "a risk of serious violence and the potential for lone actor attackers to conduct terrorism attacks."

In a letter to provincial premiers, Trudeau decried the protests as "a threat to our democracy."

Police this week arrested dozens of protesters, including four people charged with conspiracy to murder police officers at a checkpoint between Coutts, Alberta and Sweet Grass, Montana.

They also seized dozens of vehicles, as well as a cache of weapons that included rifles, handguns, body armor and ammunition.

Freeland said bank accounts of protesters and their backers have been frozen, "and more accounts will be frozen."

Authorities have also moved to choke off crowdfunding and cryptocurrency transactions supporting the protesters, she said.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)