Kuwait Times

Trudeau defends emergency powers use against truckers

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OTTAWA: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau testified at a public inquiry on Friday to defend his use of emergency powers to dislodge noisy trucker-led protestors that jammed the capital earlier this year, citing what he called threats of serious violence. His testimony at the Public Order Emergency Commission wrapped up six weeks of hearings on the rarely used powers, which were invoked in February after weeks of protests that brought Ottawa to a standstill and disrupted trade. Critics have said Trudeau’s use of those powers was excessive.

Trudeau told the inquiry that protesters had rammed vehicles into police cruisers and used children as shields. He said police were concerned they might be hoarding weapons while Canada’s spy agency warned of“the presence of people promoting ideologica­l ly motivated violent extremism” that risked triggering lone wolf attacks. Tensions rose further when counterpro­tests popped up, with “grandmothe­rs standing in residentia­l streets against massive trucks,” Trudeau said, raising concerns about Canadians taking matters into their own hands.

“We were seeing things escalate,” he said, adding that advice and “my own inclinatio­n was that... we needed to do something to keep Canadians safe.” Invoking the Emergencie­s Act, he concluded, “was the right thing to do. And we did it.” The self-styled “Freedom Convoy” of truckers rolled into the capital on Jan 29 from across Canada to express anger at COVID vaccine mandates.

As solidarity rallies popped up - blocking trade corridors including a bridge to Detroit that is the busiest internatio­nal crossing in North America - their demands expanded to a broader rejection of pandemic restrictio­ns and an anti-establishm­ent agenda. The use of extraordin­ary powers of the act to remove the protests and blockades was criticized as overreach by political opponents and civil liberties groups.

The commission has been mandated to assess the “appropriat­eness and effectiven­ess of the measures” taken by the government to deal with the protests. It is not, however, empowered to level sanctions. Led by former judge Paul Rouleau, the commission has heard from officials, protest leaders and Ottawa residents impacted by the big rigs’ incessant honking and diesel fumes.

Tinder box versus bouncy castles

“It was a tinder box waiting to explode. It was not a family festival,” former Ottawa police chief Peter Sloly testified. He resigned during the crisis over what the commission heard was a disorganiz­ed police response, including intelligen­ce failures and leaks - both now under investigat­ion. Convoy organizers have painted a much different picture, calling their actions legitimate pushback against “evil” policies and describing a festive atmosphere in front of Parliament with hot tubs, bouncy castles and barbecues.

“We weren’t there to disrupt the city residents,” trucker Brigitte Belton told the inquiry. “We were there to be heard.” The commission heard evidence of incendiary comments and extremist elements of the protest that included calls for a coup and the spread of conspiracy theories. Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland testified on Thursday that the protests risked damaging investor confidence and “doing long-term and possibly irreparabl­e harm to our trading relationsh­ip with the United States”.

Text messages between officials, and readouts of calls with bankers and the White House in Washington showed frustratio­ns rising as Ottawa and the provinces struggled to bring the protest movement to heel. One banker related to Freeland an investor’s descriptio­n of Canada amid the chaos as a “banana republic” while a provincial premier accused the feds of stoking protestor anger by “calling them all Nazis”.

 ?? ?? OTTAWA: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau testifies before the Public Order Emergency Commission public inquiry on Nov 25, 2022. — AFP
OTTAWA: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau testifies before the Public Order Emergency Commission public inquiry on Nov 25, 2022. — AFP

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