Santa Fe New Mexican

Trudeau invokes emergency powers to quell protests

Canadian prime minister has threatened to tow vehicles, freeze truckers’ bank accounts and suspend insurance on their rigs

- By Rob Gillies and Ted Shaffrey

OTTAWA, Ontario rime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked emergency powers Monday to quell the paralyzing protests by truckers and others angry over Canada’s COVID-19 restrictio­ns, outlining plans not only to tow away their rigs but to strike at their bank accounts and their livelihood­s.

“These blockades are illegal, and if you are still participat­ing, the time to go home is now,” he declared.

In invoking Canada’s Emergencie­s Act, which gives the federal government broad powers to restore order, Trudeau ruled out using the military. His government instead threatened to tow away vehicles to keep essential services running; freeze truckers’ personal and corporate bank accounts; and suspend the insurance on their rigs.

“Consider yourselves warned,” Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said. “Send your rigs home.”

Freeland, who is also the finance minister, said the government will broaden its anti-money-laundering regulation­s to target crowd-funding sites that are being used to support the illegal blockades.

Trudeau did not indicate when the new crackdowns would begin. But he gave assurances the emergency measures “will be time-limited, geographic­ally targeted, as well as reasonable and proportion­ate to the threats they are meant to address.”

For more than two weeks, hundreds and sometimes thousands of protesters in trucks and other vehicles have clogged the streets of Ottawa, the capital, and besieged Parliament Hill, railing against vaccine mandates for truckers and other COVID-19 precaution­s and condemning Trudeau’s Liberal government.

Members of the self-styled Freedom Convoy have also blockaded various U.S.-Canadian border crossings, though the busiest and most important — the Ambassador Bridge connecting Windsor, Ontario, to Detroit — was reopened Sunday after police arrested

Pdozens of demonstrat­ors and broke the nearly weeklong siege that had disrupted auto production in both countries. “This is the biggest, greatest, most severe test Trudeau has faced,” said Wesley Wark, a University of Ottawa professor and national security expert. Invoking the Emergencie­s Act would allow the government to declare the Ottawa protest illegal and clear it out by such means as towing vehicles, Wark said. It would also enable the government to make greater use of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the federal police agency.

One of the protest organizers in Ottawa vowed not to back down in the face of pressure from the government.

“There are no threats that will frighten us. We will hold the line,” Tamara Lich said.

Cadalin Valcea, a truck driver from Montreal protesting for more than two weeks, said he will move only if forced: “We want only one thing: to finish with this lockdown and these restrictio­ns.”

Trudeau met virtually with leaders of the country’s provinces before announcing the crackdown.

Doug Ford, the Conservati­ve premier of Ontario, which is Canada’s most populous province and includes Ottawa and Windsor, expressed support for emergency action, saying: “We need law and order. Our country is at risk now.”

But the leaders of other provinces warned the prime minister against taking such a step, some of them cautioning it could inflame an already dangerous situation.

“At this point, it would not help the social climate. There is a lot of pressure, and I think we have to be careful,” said Quebec Premier François Legault. “It wouldn’t help for the polarizati­on.”

The protests have drawn support from right-wing extremists and armed citizens in Canada, and have been cheered on in the U.S. by Fox News personalit­ies and conservati­ves such as Donald Trump. Other conservati­ves pushed Trudeau to simply drop the pandemic mandates.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A protester yells ‘freedom’ Monday toward a person who attempted to stick a paper sign on a truck criticizin­g the ‘Freedom Convoy,’ a protest against COVID-19 measures that has grown into a broader anti-government protest, on its 18th day in Ottawa.
JUSTIN TANG/ASSOCIATED PRESS A protester yells ‘freedom’ Monday toward a person who attempted to stick a paper sign on a truck criticizin­g the ‘Freedom Convoy,’ a protest against COVID-19 measures that has grown into a broader anti-government protest, on its 18th day in Ottawa.

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