Berliner Boersenzeitung - Canada protests against Covid measures gain steam

EUR -
AED 4.244928
AFN 81.485785
ALL 98.662904
AMD 443.576589
ANG 2.06857
AOA 1059.932354
ARS 1366.573702
AUD 1.768412
AWG 2.083454
AZN 1.964821
BAM 1.952058
BBD 2.332708
BDT 141.304017
BGN 1.955852
BHD 0.435958
BIF 3400.567349
BMD 1.155869
BND 1.479177
BOB 8.000732
BRL 6.348727
BSD 1.155275
BTN 99.356398
BWP 15.425563
BYN 3.780919
BYR 22655.037404
BZD 2.320671
CAD 1.568197
CDF 3325.435533
CHF 0.9396
CLF 0.028202
CLP 1082.314678
CNY 8.298852
CNH 8.306626
COP 4739.641881
CRC 582.37857
CUC 1.155869
CUP 30.630535
CVE 110.529999
CZK 24.801518
DJF 205.421594
DKK 7.458385
DOP 68.484699
DZD 150.491806
EGP 58.082059
ERN 17.338039
ETB 155.242365
FJD 2.589436
FKP 0.850046
GBP 0.852535
GEL 3.149755
GGP 0.850046
GHS 11.876606
GIP 0.850046
GMD 82.641868
GNF 10005.204706
GTQ 8.878903
GYD 241.708747
HKD 9.073226
HNL 30.225936
HRK 7.536498
HTG 151.18887
HUF 402.870177
IDR 18830.150451
ILS 4.049183
IMP 0.850046
INR 99.673497
IQD 1514.188724
IRR 48673.654267
ISK 143.582531
JEP 0.850046
JMD 184.401298
JOD 0.819495
JPY 167.471619
KES 149.280303
KGS 101.080427
KHR 4646.594829
KMF 491.817871
KPW 1040.288268
KRW 1578.483917
KWD 0.3538
KYD 0.962763
KZT 592.459159
LAK 25056.358314
LBP 103565.884911
LKR 347.86016
LRD 230.769196
LSL 20.597679
LTL 3.412982
LVL 0.699174
LYD 6.270548
MAD 10.544421
MDL 19.756299
MGA 5126.280098
MKD 61.534809
MMK 2426.115055
MNT 4140.864031
MOP 9.341474
MRU 45.853624
MUR 52.488243
MVR 17.806183
MWK 2006.588849
MXN 21.898296
MYR 4.905543
MZN 73.918232
NAD 20.598033
NGN 1784.269097
NIO 41.954267
NOK 11.44214
NPR 158.970636
NZD 1.904086
OMR 0.444413
PAB 1.155295
PEN 4.164021
PGK 4.764381
PHP 65.577107
PKR 327.228895
PLN 4.274
PYG 9216.25316
QAR 4.207944
RON 5.023173
RSD 117.227113
RUB 90.61625
RWF 1647.113689
SAR 4.336629
SBD 9.648492
SCR 16.960704
SDG 694.098549
SEK 10.971355
SGD 1.481483
SHP 0.908332
SLE 25.689224
SLL 24238.004584
SOS 660.581104
SRD 44.779507
STD 23924.159894
SVC 10.108971
SYP 15028.492747
SZL 20.598172
THB 37.654175
TJS 11.703718
TMT 4.045542
TND 3.37803
TOP 2.707164
TRY 45.513622
TTD 7.843033
TWD 34.116644
TZS 2991.311042
UAH 48.034882
UGX 4165.015869
USD 1.155869
UYU 47.241076
UZS 14714.215933
VES 118.091759
VND 30142.180505
VUV 138.605241
WST 3.180697
XAF 654.707622
XAG 0.031724
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.123794
XDR 0.8175
XOF 653.065815
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.818382
ZAR 20.595978
ZMK 10404.190789
ZMW 28.016536
ZWL 372.189429
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Canada protests against Covid measures gain steam
Canada protests against Covid measures gain steam

Canada protests against Covid measures gain steam

An occupation of Canada's capital by truckers opposed to vaccine mandates gained steam as it entered its second week on Saturday, with more demonstrators piling onto the clogged streets of Ottawa, while protests kicked off in several other cities.

Text size:

In the capital, protesters huddled around campfires in bone-chilling temperatures and erected bouncy castles for kids outside Parliament, while waving Canadian flags and shouting anti-government slogans.

The atmosphere appeared more festive than a week earlier, when several protesters waved Confederate flags and Nazi symbols and clashed with locals.

Police, who were out in force and put up barriers overnight to limit vehicle access to the city center, said they were bracing for up to 2,000 protesters -- as well as 1,000 counterprotesters -- to join hundreds of truckers already jamming Ottawa streets.

But organizers of the so-called Freedom Convoy told AFP they expected their numbers to swell into the tens of thousands.

Similar protests were happening in Toronto, Quebec City and Winnipeg. And in southern Alberta province, truckers blocked a major border crossing to the US state of Montana.

"This remains an increasingly volatile and increasingly dangerous demonstration," Ottawa police chief Peter Sloly told a news conference Friday.

With public anger rising -- thousands of residents have complained of harassment by protesters, and an online petition demanding action has drawn 40,000 signatures -- Sloly vowed to crack down on what he called an "unlawful" occupation of the city.

But he offered no timeline.

- No end in sight -

Reached for comment by AFP, protest coordinator Jim Torma said the protesters would not back down.

"They're not going to hide us," Torma said. "We're going to be in (politicians') faces as long as it takes" to force an end to public health restrictions aimed at slowing the spread of Covid-19.

Kimberly Ball, who with her husband drove five hours from a small town west of Toronto to join the Ottawa protest, told AFP, "It's about our freedom."

Holding back tears, she said, "A couple of people we know, friends, also lost their jobs because of these (vaccine) mandates."

Ball has had Covid and said she questions whether the vaccines are safe and effective.

She is, however, in the minority in Canada, where 90 percent of adults are fully vaccinated.

- A 'fringe minority'? -

The Freedom Convoy started on Canada's Pacific coast in late January and picked up supporters along the long trek to the capital -- as well as more than 10 million Canadian dollars ($8 million) in online donations.

The number of protesters in Ottawa had peaked last Saturday at several thousand before dwindling to a few hundred by midweek, officials said.

The protest has received support from tech magnate Elon Musk and former US president Donald Trump, who in a statement Friday called Prime Minister Justin Trudeau a "far left lunatic."

The Canadian prime minister has said the protesters represent only a "fringe minority," though polls show one-third of Canadians support the call to lift all Covid restrictions.

The leaders of two Western provinces, Jason Kenney of Alberta and Scott Moe of Saskatchewan have added their voices to the anti-mandate push.

"There are many jurisdictions around the world that have adopted more common-sense travel protocols than we have now in place in Canada," Kenney said Friday.

Moe, meanwhile, announced an imminent lifting of all pandemic restrictions in Saskatchewan, despite pushback from doctors.

Vaccine mandates and most other Covid measures are the responsibility of provincial authorities in Canada.

"What's necessary is your freedom," Moe said in a video address. "What's necessary is getting your life back to normal."

Ottawa residents, however, are fed up with the chaos the protests have brought to their streets.

On Friday, a class action was launched against the truckers on behalf of residents who said they had been heckled, yelled at to remove their masks and intimidated by honking that measured ear-popping decibels and made sleep near-impossible.

"The Class Members are living in daily torment," reads the court filing, which seeks Can$9.8 million (US$7.7 million) in damages.

Late Friday, GoFundMe removed a Freedom Convoy fundraiser from its website after receiving evidence from law enforcement that the demonstration "has become an occupation, with police reports of violence and other unlawful activity."

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)