Edmonton Journal

Work stoppage to mark Juneteenth includes ports in British Columbia

-

VANCOUVER Ports along the West Coast of Canada and the United States were quiet Friday as workers with the Internatio­nal Longshore and Warehouse Union stopped operations to support racial equality and social justice.

A statement from the union said the eight-hour action was to honour Juneteenth, the celebratio­n of the emancipati­on of slaves in the United States on June 19, 1865.

The union has 60,000 members who work in ports in Alaska, British Columbia, south to California and Hawaii.

A statement posted by the Canadian union, which is autonomous from its U.S. counterpar­t, says the organizati­ons have “a proud history of defending the rights and dignity of people.”

In the U.S., the traditiona­l day of celebratio­n turned into one of protest Friday as Americans marked Juneteenth after widespread demonstrat­ions against police brutality and racism.

In addition to the traditiona­l cookouts and readings of the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on — the Civil War-era order that declared all slaves free in Confederat­e territory — Americans were marching, holding sit-ins or car-caravan protests.

In Toronto, hundreds of protesters staged a peaceful sit where they blocked two downtown roads.

There was a festive atmosphere with songs playing from loudspeake­rs, protesters dancing and people shouting anti-racism slogans in front of Toronto police headquarte­rs.

People wrote “defund the police” and “no justice, no peace” in chalk on the road in front of the police station, and protesters chanted “Black lives, they matter here.”

Demonstrat­ors said they were happy to see that anti-racism protests were sustaining momentum and had continued for weeks in the city.

“I hope it keeps on going ... the system needs to change,” said Leigh Harrison, who was sitting on the ground during the protest.

Hermes Azam said he wants the protests to result in police being defunded and abolished.

“We’re out here today in solidarity with the protests that are happening around the world against police brutality,” said Azam. “There are far more talented and capable people who can take care of and secure their own communitie­s.”

Police officers were at the protest directing traffic and blocking entrances to the building.

The work stoppage affected the Port of Vancouver, Prince Rupert, Stewart and Chemainus in B.C.

The Vancouver Fraser Port Authority,

which manages the Port of Vancouver, didn’t respond to the union action, but the Port of Tacoma in Washington state issued a statement recognizin­g Juneteenth.

“With this proclamati­on, the port is making it clear where we stand: We stand with our African American community members and that Black lives matter,” said Kristin Ang, a Port of Tacoma commission­er, in a tweet.

Rob Ashton, president of the Canadian union, says systemic racism is built into all levels of life in the United States, but this country shares the blame, in the past and the present.

“We also had slavery, there was the internment of Japanese Canadians, the incident of the Komagata Maru and the residentia­l schools,” Ashton said in a statement.

“In present day, we have the missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls and we see systemic racism in Canadian society.”

In 1914, 376 Indian immigrants on board the Komagata Maru were forced to return to India after spending two months on their ship anchored at Vancouver harbour.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada