Ontario brings in MORE draconian rules to crack down on Freedom Convoy truckers
Ontario declares state of EMERGENCY: Freedom Convoy drivers can now be fined $100,000, jailed for a year, have their trucks seized and licenses revoked after Biden urged Trudeau to get even tougher
Conservative Ontario Premier Doug Ford on Friday declared a state of emergency, threatening fines and jail White House is urging Justin Trudeau’s government to use its ‘federal powers’ to end the Freedom ConvoyBiden’s cabinet secretaries Alejandro Mayorkas and Pete Buttigieg spoke with Canadian counterparts Canadian trucker protesting since mid-Jan against Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Covid-19 vaccine mandateInternational route drivers must be double jabbed, and 85 percent are, but the demonstrators oppose the ruleSince Monday at least three US-Canadian border bridges have been blocked in Ontario, Alberta and ManitobaOntario’s Ambassador Bridge, between Detroit and Windsor, is North America’s busiest international crossingOntario premier Doug Ford asked courts to freeze donations to truckers on a crowdfunding site GiveSendGo Trudeau said he spoke to officials, accused drivers of ‘hurting jobs, businesses, and our country’s economy’
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A state of emergency has been declared in Ontario after the Biden administration urged Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government to use its federal powers to end the Freedom Convoy demonstrations blockading key border crossings to protest Canada’s COVID-19 restrictions.
Conservative Ontario Premier Doug Ford on Friday declared a 42-hour state of emergency, threatening vehicle seizures, fines of C$100,000 ($79,000), jail time of up to a year, and suspension of commercial licenses to punish protesters who do not comply with orders to disperse.
‘This is a pivotal moment for our nation. The eyes of the world upon us right now, and what they are seeing is not who we are, this is not what Canada is about,’ said Ford at a briefing. ‘As a province, as a nation, we must collectively draw a line.’
‘We cannot have people occupying cities, holding them hostage, holding millions and millions of people hostage,’ he said. ‘To the occupiers: please, go home.’
Following Ford’s announcement, there were multiple reports that police forces from around Canada were pouring into Windsor, Ontario ahead of a possible operation to clear the blockaded Ambassador Bridge, which connects Windsor with Detroit.
Separately, the mayor of Windsor asked for an injunction Friday afternoon to try to break up the bridge blockade, as parts shortages caused by the protest forced General Motors, Ford, Toyota and Honda to close US auto plants or cancel shifts.
With pressure mounting, protesters claimed they were reopening a single lane entering Canada on the bridge, as a purported show of good faith. However, Windsor police said in a statement on Friday afternoon that the bridge remained totally blocked, adding that ‘negotiations remain ongoing with the goal of a peaceful resolution.’
Meanwhile, demonstrators surrounded Canada’s parliament in Ottawa for a ‘Jericho March’ on Friday, the 15th day of protests in the national capital. ‘We are now two weeks into the siege of Ottawa,’ Ford said. ‘It´s an illegal occupation. It´s no longer a protest.’
Biden and Trudeau spoke directly on Friday during a virtual meeting with other NATO leaders on the situation in Ukraine, but it was unclear whether they also discussed the ongoing US-Canada border blockade.
The White House on Thursday said Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg spoke with their Canadian counterparts and urged them to help resolve the standoff. Details of the discussions were not immediately available.
On Friday the blockade halting traffic at the Ambassador Bridge crossing connecting Windsor, Ontario to Detroit entered its fifth day, disrupting the flow products between the two countries and threatening to shut down production at several US auto plants.
The bridge, which connects Windsor, Ontario with Detroit, Michigan, is North America’s busiest international land border and usually carries more than $327 million of goods per day on over 8,000 trucks, accounting for 27 percent of the approximately $400 billion in annual trade between Canada and the US.
Two other crossings, one between Alberta and Montana and another between Manitoba and North Dakota, are also currently under protester blockade.
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer has called the protest an ‘illegal blockade’ that is causing an ‘economic crisis’ in Michigan.
People attend a protest to blockade the Ambassador Bridge on Friday, sealing off the flow of commercial traffic over the bridge into Canada from Detroit in Windsor, Canada
The closed Ambassador Bridge is seen on Friday. The bridge, a vital link where 25 percent of goods between the two countries passes on an estimated 10,000 trucks each day, has been shut down by truckers protesting vaccine mandates
Blockaders man the barricades at the Ambassador Bridge on Friday, as Ontario declared a state of emergency
People debate whether or not to open one lane of traffic on Friday as truckers and supporters continue blocking access to the Ambassador Bridge, which connects Detroit and Windsor, in protest against vaccine mandates
Truck drivers and their supporters participate in a ‘Jericho March’ around Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Friday as protests in the Canadian capital and several key border crossings continued in a tense standoff over vaccine mandates
Three crossings are now blockaded, with the Ambassador Bridge in Detroit the most key for trade
Biden and Trudeau are seen together in 2016. Biden’s administration is urging Trudeau’s government to use its federal powers to end the Freedom Convoy demonstrations blockading key border crossings
Trudeau is under mounting pressure to get the situation under control, with Washington calling on its northern neighbor to use federal powers to end the blockades.
Ford, who faces elections in June, has likewise been under fire for several days over his perceived inaction to bring an end to the trucker-led disruptions.
‘We will take whatever steps are necessary to ensure the border is reopened,’ Ford said on Friday as he threatened steep fines and jail unless protesters end their ‘illegal occupation.’
‘To the people of Ottawa under siege, I say we will ensure you’re able to resume life and business as soon as possible.’
Premiere Ford acknowledged that Canadians have the ‘right to peacefully protest when they disagree with what our government is doing’ to stem the pandemic, adding: ‘I know these frustrations have reached a boiling point for many Canadians.’
But he warned: ‘This is no longer a protest.’
Truckers have ‘taken a city of one million people hostage for the past two weeks’ and have been ‘targeting our lifeline for food, fuel and goods across our borders’ while ‘trying to force a political agenda through disruption, intimidation, and chaos.’
‘We’re in a critical situation worldwide economically… the last thing we need is an anchor around our neck,’ he said.
Canada’s federal, provincial and local authorities have hesitated to forcibly remove the Freedom Convoy, reflecting apparently a lack of manpower by local police, Canada’s reverence for free speech, and fear of violence.
Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens warned earlier this week that some of the truckers are ‘willing to die.’
But the political pressure to reopen the bridge appeared to be mounting along with the economic toll. The Biden administration has urged Trudeau´s government to end the blockade, and Michigan’s governor likewise called for a quick resolution to the standoff.
‘American legislators are freaking out, and rightfully so,’ said Nelson Wiseman, a political science professor at the University of Toronto. ‘Pressure is now being exerted by the White House on Trudeau to act more decisively.’
Ontario has brought in more draconian rules to crack down on Freedom Convoy truckers – including vehicle seizures and fines – just days after honking was banned and after the US told Canada to use federal powers to end the blockades (pictured, the blockade on Ambassador Bridge)
Protestors and supporters set up at a blockade at the foot of the Ambassador Bridge, sealing off the flow of commercial traffic over the bridge into Canada from Detroit on Thursday
Following a march, dozens of truck drivers and their supporters gather to pray at Parliament Hill on Friday as a convoy of truck protesters against Covid mandates in Canada continues to block large parts of downtown in Ottawa, Ontario
Demonstrators gather to pray at Parliament Hill on Friday on the 15th day of mass protests in downtown Ottawa. A state of emergency has been called in Ottawa as police and local officials decide on how best to bring the event to an end
Ford also moved to cut off funding for the protests by successfully asking a court to freeze $8.6 million in donations to the convoy through crowd-funding site GiveSendGo. The Christian fundraising site, based in the US, said in a statement that the Canadian court had no jurisdiction in the matter.
Canadian officials previously got GoFundMe to cut off funding after protest organizers used the site to raise about 10 million Canadian dollars ($7.8 million).
GoFundMe determined that the fundraising effort violated the site’s terms of service due to unlawful activity.
Windsor mayor Drew Dilkens has stepped up calls for the use of force to end the blockades, telling CNN that if ‘the protesters don’t leave, there will have to be a path forward.’
‘If that means physically removing them, that means physically removing them, and we’re prepared to do that,’ he said.
Truck drivers, who have been in the city since the Freedom Convoy traveled to the nation’s capital on January 23, have since Monday blocked the Ambassador Bridge.
They are protesting Trudeau’s vaccine mandate, under which truckers driving international routes must be fully vaccinated, and though 85 percent of them are, many oppose the rules.
The snowballing trucker movement has morphed over the past weeks into a broader protest against Covid-19 health restrictions and Trudeau’s government — and sparked solidarity rallies across the nation and abroad.
Protesters participate in a ‘Jericho March’ around Parliament Hill on Ottawa on Friday. The Biblical city of Jericho, as mentioned in Joshua 6, was a city of false gods and corruption
Over 400 vehicles have now joined the convoy in Ottawa, which has forced businesses to close and unnerved residents. A state of emergency has been called in Ottawa as police and local officials decide on how best to bring the event to an end
Trucks sit parked on Wellington Street in Ottawa blockading Parliament Hill as truckers continue to protest against the vaccine mandates in downtown Ottawa, Ontario, Canada on Friday
Ottawa citizens go to work as truckers block the streets near the Parliament Hill during a protest against the vaccine mandates in downtown Ottawa, Ontario, Canada on Friday
A supporter, Canadian veteran from Cape Breton (Quebec), takes photos of the truckers in front of Parliament Hill on Friday as truckers continue to protest against the vaccine mandates in downtown Ottawa
Truckers in Ottawa continue their protest against vaccine mandates on Friday. A state of emergency was declared in the city of Ottawa on 06 February
Federal Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said Royal Canadian Mounted Police reinforcements are being sent to Windsor, Ottawa and Coutts, Alberta where another border blockade is happening.
Trudeau met virtually with leaders of Canada’s opposition late Thursday and said he spoke with Windsor’s mayor.
Trudeau’s office said there is a willingness to ‘respond with whatever it takes’ to end the blockades.
And with political and economic pressure mounting, Windsor Mayor Dilkens announced the city will seek a court injunction to end the occupation. He said: ‘The economic harm is not sustainable and it must come to an end.’
In Ottawa, the epicenter of the protests, police were waiting on Thursday for a request for provincial and federal reinforcements to be completed.
They have made 25 arrests so far. Ottawa police chief Peter Sloly expects the reinforcements to arrive in the next 48 hours, ahead of a potential rise in protesters in the city over the weekend.
‘This is an entirely sophisticated level of demonstrators. They have the capability to run strong organization here provincially and nationally, and we’re seeing that play out in real-time,’ Sloly told reporters.
‘It is a significant risk that we’re trying to mitigate and overcome, and as we get more resources, we will get better results.’
As the standoff dragged on, some US pundits grew increasingly strident in their calls for the demonstrations to be crushed with the use of force.
‘Slash the tires, empty gas tanks, arrest the drivers, and move the trucks,’ tweeted CNN contributor Juliette Kayyem.
‘The convoy protest, applauded by right wing media as a ‘freedom protest,’ is an economic and security issue now,’ she added.
Bloomberg columnist Matthew Yglesias tweeted: ‘Send the Marines to Detroit and clear the bridge.’
Though he may have sounded tongue-in-cheek, Yglesias explained in other tweets why he felt it was necessary to stop the protests by any means necessary.
‘It’s in fact critically important that the world not allow democratic self-government to be replaced by heckler’s veto by whichever faction happens to own larger vehicles,’ he wrote.
‘People on foot blocking traffic for short periods of time isn’t great but society survives it happening because it’s a fairly ineffective tactic. The truck blockade is more potent & would be a great tactic for bringing down a dictator, exactly why democracies can’t tolerate it,’ added Yglesias.
Conservatives in the US have largely defended the truckers, with Senator Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican, saying he hopes similar protests ‘clog up cities’ across the US.
‘I’m all for it,’ Paul told the Daily Signal on Thursday. ‘Civil disobedience is a time-honored tradition in our country, from slavery to civil rights, to you name it. Peaceful protest, clog things up, make people think about the mandates.’
Rep. Lisa McClain, a Michigan Republican, told DailyMail.com on Friday: ‘Americans are fed up with government mandates and it’s time for the Biden Administration to listen to the people.’
‘These mandates are going to cripple our supply chain, and the Democrats can blame freedom loving truck drivers, but the real blame is on the vaccine requirements at the border,’ she added.
Fox News Channel host Sean Hannity cheered the truckers on while showing four live reports from Ottawa this week. Tucker Carlson’s online store is selling ‘I (heart) Tucker’ T-shirts edited to say ‘I (heart) Truckers.’
Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said in a Fox News appearance on Friday: ‘People should not have to choose between their job and their medical freedom. These truckers were frontline workers.’
‘They have kept us going through the pandemic. They have kept working day and night. And they should not be demonized like we are seeing in Canada, and we certainly don’t want to see this happen in our country. But, If the Biden administration had their way [on vaccine mandates], this is exactly what we’re going to see,’ she added.
A protester waves the Canadian flag in front of a revving truck on Wellington Street as a protest against COVID-19 restrictions continues in Ottawa, on Thursday
A woman with a mohawk hair-cut featuring the Canadian maple leaf joins hundreds of truck drivers and their supporters as they gather on Thursday to block the streets of downtown Ottawa as part of a convoy of truck protesters
People walk near Canadian Parliament buildings as hundreds of truck drivers and their supporters gather to block the streets of downtown Ottawa to protest against Trudeau’s Covid-19 vaccine mandate
Truck drivers and their supporters gather to block the streets of downtown Ottawa as part of a convoy of truck protesters against Covid-19 mandates
A protester at the Freedom Convoy demonstration in Ottawa, Canada, on Thursday, holds a sign reading ‘Love over hate’ as they demonstrate against Covid-19 vaccine mandates
Canadian truckers blockade the roads in downtown Ottawa near the country’s parliament as part of a protest against vaccine mandates that would forced drivers who do international routes to have the jabs
A protester carries a sign reading ‘Let’s go Trudeau. No, seriously, go’ at a truckers demonstration against the Covid-19 vaccine mandate for international drivers in Ottawa, Ontario on Thursday
US President Joe Biden on Thursday urged his Canadian counterpart Justin Trudeau to use federal powers to end the truckers blockades (pictured in Ontario on Thursday) after the bumper-to-bumper demonstrations forced auto plants on both sides of the border to shut down or scale back production
In Ottawa, the Canadian capital, a protester bangs gas cans together while yelling ‘Freedom’ on Thursday. Truckers are using their vehicles to block roads surrounding Parliament Hill in protest of COVID-19 mandates
People walk near Canadian Parliament buildings as hundreds of truck drivers and their supporters gather to block the streets of downtown Ottawa to protest against Trudeau’s Covid-19 vaccine mandate
A protester writes ‘Freedom’ on the floor as truckers and supporters continue blocking access to the Ambassador Bridge, North America’s busiest international land crossing, as they demonstrate against vaccine mandates on Thursday
The Ambassador Bridge between Windsor, Ontario and Detroit is one of the busiest border crossings in North America and a supply route for Detroit’s carmakers, some of whom are scrambling to find alternate routes to limit economic damage.
Canada sends 75 percent of its exports to the United States, and the bridge usually handles 8,000 trucks a day, representing a quarter of all cross-border trade, or about C$500 million ($392.56 million) per day.
About C$100 million worth of auto parts cross the border each day, with many shipments timed to arrive just as manufacturers need them.
General Motors Co, Ford Motor Co, Chrysler parent Stellantis and Toyota Motor Corp have been impacted by the blockades.
Anderson Economic Group is estimating $51 million in lost wages just this week due to the blockade, ramping up pressure on officials to take action to resolve the crisis.
While Canadian officials at the federal, provincial and municipal levels have held regular meetings, they have had limited impact on the ground.
Ottawa Police lost their enforcement opportunity when the convoy first rolled into town at the end of January, said Carleton University criminologist Jeffrey Monaghan, adding they now have no good options.
Monaghan told Reuters the police could go in aggressively and risk a violent confrontation or they could tighten the screws – a longer-term approach that will likely anger residents.
Truckers are parked near Parliament in Ottawa as they continue protest against Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s vaccine mandates which were imposed last month
Protesters wearing Canadian flags walk in front of a truckers blockade in Ottawa on Thursday as they continue to demonstrate against Trudeau’s vaccine mandates which would forced international truck drivers to be vaccinated
A trucker waves a Canadian flag on Thursday as they continue protest against Covid-19 vaccine mandates brought in by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau last month
A brightly dressed protester waves two Canadian flags while wearing a third during the Freedom Convoy demonstrations against Covid-19 vaccine mandates in Ottawa, Ontario, on Thursday
Protesters walk in front of a blockade of trucks parked outside the Canadian parliament building in downtown Ottawa on Thursday during a demonstration against Covid-19 vaccine mandates ongoing since January 29
Demonstrators against Covid-19 vaccine mandates block the roadway at the Ambassador Bridge border crossing on Wednesday evening as Ontario state officials move to impose more draconian rules in a bid to end the blockades
Conservative Ontario Premier Doug Ford (pictured) has moved to cut off funding for the protests by successfully asking a court to freeze millions of dollars in donations to the convoy through crowd-funding site GiveSendGo. Ford has called the protests an occupation
Trudeau on Thursday night said that he had been in talks about how to end the protests, which began in mid January and have caused significant economic damage.
The drivers set out from British Columbia on January 23 for Ottawa, and staged a protest in the capital on January 29 before taking their demonstrations across the country.
Over 85 per cent of truck drivers, and 90 per cent of all Canadian adults, are fully vaccinated and the protest has been condemned by the Canadian Trucking Alliance.
‘This evening, I had several meetings that were focused on the illegal blockades and occupations happening across the country,’ Trudeau tweeted.
‘They’re harming the communities they’re taking place in – and they’re hurting jobs, businesses, and our country’s economy.’
Trudeau said he had held an Incident Response Group meeting with ministers and officials to discuss the crisis.
‘We’ll continue to work closely with municipal and provincial governments to end these blockades, and to make sure they have the resources they need,’ he said.
He said he had spoken to the mayor of Windsor, Drew Dilkens, to offer his support.
‘We’re committed to helping the Mayor and the province get the situation under control – because it is causing real harm to workers and economies on both sides of the border.’
And he spoke to leaders of the opposition, urging them to unite with him and call for an end to the protests.
‘Finally, I briefed the leaders of the opposition parties on the current situation and the latest developments.
‘I stressed how important it is for all Members of Parliament, from every party, to denounce these illegal acts – and to call for an end to these blockades.’
After the meeting, Conservative interim leader Candice Bergen said she wants Trudeau to ‘take action to bring this to an end peacefully and quickly.’
Truck drivers, who have been in the city since the Freedom Convoy traveled to the nation’s capitol on January 23, have since Monday blocked the bridge in a demonstration against Trudeau’s Covid-19 vaccine mandate
Trudeau on Thursday night said that he had been in talks about how to end the protests, which began in mid January and have caused significant economic damage
Protestors and supporters set up at a blockade at the foot of the Ambassador Bridge, sealing off the flow of commercial traffic over the bridge into Canada from Detroit on Thursday
People erect a tent on the blocked Ambassador Bridge between Detroit, Michigan and Windsor, Ontario on Thursday. The protestors could now face reprisals
A protester waving a Canadian flag walks in front of a truckers blockade in Ottawa on Thursday as they continue to demonstrate against Trudeau’s vaccine mandates which would forced international truck drivers to be vaccinated
Justin Trudeau is seen on Thursday addressing a question in parliament. He is battling to quell the protests against his vaccine mandate
In the US, authorities braced for the possibility of similar truck-borne protests inspired by the Canadians, and authorities in Paris and Belgium banned road blockades to head off disruptions there, too.
The US Department of Homeland Security said in a bulletin to local and state law enforcement agencies that it has received reports that truckers are planning to ‘potentially block roads in major metropolitan cities’ in a protest against vaccine mandates and other issues.
The agency said the convoy could begin in Southern California as early as this weekend, possibly disrupting traffic around the Super Bowl, and reach Washington in March in time for the State of the Union address, according to a copy of Tuesday’s bulletin obtained by The Associated Press.
The White House said the department is ‘surging additional staff’ to the Super Bowl just in case.
The ban on road blockades in Europe and the threat of prison and heavy fines were likewise prompted by online chatter from groups calling on drivers to converge on Paris and Brussels over the next few days.
The Ambassador Bridge is the busiest US-Canadian border crossing, carrying 25 per cent of all trade between the two countries, and the effects of the blockade there were felt rapidly.
Ford said its Windsor engine plant reopened Thursday after being shut down on Wednesday because of a lack of parts. But the factory and the company’s assembly plant in Oakville, Ontario, near Toronto, were operating at reduced capacity, the automaker said.
On the US side, GM sent the first shift home two hours early Thursday at its Flint, Michigan, heavy-duty pickup truck plant due to parts shortages.
Stellantis cut short the first shift Friday at its Jeep plant in Toledo, Ohio, due to parts shortages.
Also, Honda will temporarily stop production on one assembly line during the day shift Friday at its plant in Alliston, Ontario. It’s because of border delays. U.S. plants are scheduled to run normally Friday.
Toyota said three of its plants in Ontario closed for the rest of the week because of parts shortages, and production also had to be curtailed in Georgetown, Kentucky.
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer urged Canadian authorities to quickly resolve the standoff, saying: ‘It’s hitting paychecks and production lines. That is unacceptable.’
Appearing on CNN, Whitmer called the protest an ‘illegal blockade’ that is causing an ‘economic crisis’ in Michigan.
‘This is not just about the Michigan economy, this is this is for working people all throughout the Midwest,’ she said.
A DJ plays as protestors and supporters attend a blockade at the foot of the Ambassador Bridge on Thursday
Protesters are seen in Windsor, Ontario, on Thursday night blocking the bridge
Hundreds of demonstrators in trucks have also paralyzed the streets of downtown Ottawa for almost two weeks now, and have now closed three border crossings: at Windsor; at Coutts, Alberta, opposite Montana; and at Emerson, Manitoba, across from North Dakota.
The protesters are decrying vaccine mandates for truckers and other Covid-19 restrictions and are railing against Trudeau, even though many of Canada’s precautions, such as mask rules and vaccine passports for getting into restaurants, theaters and other places, were enacted by provincial authorities, not the federal government, and are already rapidly being lifted as the omicron surge levels off.
Trudeau continued to stand firm against lifting vaccine mandates, including a requirement that all truck drivers entering the country be fully vaccinated. But because an estimated 90 per cent of the nation’s truckers are already inoculated, some conservatives have called on the prime minister to drop the mandate.
The convoy has been promoted and cheered on by many Fox News personalities and attracted support from the likes of former President Donald Trump and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.
The Associated Press identified more than a dozen Facebook groups encompassing roughly a half-million members that are being used to drum up support for the Canadian protests or plan similar ones in the U.S. and Europe.
To get around the blockade and into Canada, truckers in the Detroit area have had to drive 70 miles north to Port Huron, Michigan, and cross the Blue Water Bridge, where there was a two-hour delay leaving the US.
The blockade is happening at a bad time for the US auto industry. Supplies of new vehicles already are low across the nation because of the global shortage of computer chips, which has forced automakers to temporarily close factories.
‘The disruptions we are seeing at the US-Canada border — at the Detroit-Windsor Ambassador Bridge and at other crossings — are adding to the significant supply chain strains on manufacturers and other businesses in the United States,’ the US Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Manufacturers and Business Roundtable said in a joint statement.
‘We respectfully urge the Canadian government to act swiftly to address the disruption to the flow of trade and its impact on manufacturers and other businesses on both sides of the border.’
A great-grandfather was handcuffed and hauled away by two Canadian cops for honking his horn in support of Freedom Convoy protesters in Ottawa on Sunday
Gerry Charlebois, 78, was brought to his knees and arrested in Ottawa on Sunday for allegedly honking his horn, a day before a judge outlawed honking in the city
The Ambassador Bridge is one of at least three being blocked by the truckers – others barricaded include a crossing in Emerson, Manitoba, which sees $55 million in trade a day and a bridge in Coutts, Alberta, where $34 million in goods crosses daily – largely related to the beef and cattle industry and produce.
On Saturday, protests are planned on the Peace Bridge which connects Buffalo, New York with Fort Erie, Ontario.
Dennis Darby, head of the Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters lobby group, said the blockades were harmful.
‘It’s bad for Canada,’ he said, describing them as an ‘own goal.’
Ford’s restrictions are just the latest attempt to control the protesters.
On Monday, a court approved a 10-day ban on the honking of horns in Ottawa, the Ontario city and Canadian capital, after residents complained of the noise.
The day before the ban, a 4ft-10 inch great grandfather was handcuffed and arrested for honking his horn in support of the protesters in Ottawa.
A bystander filmed while two officers pulled over Gerry Charlebois, 78, for beeping his horn.
‘What did he do wrong?’ the bystander asked.
‘None of your f****** concern, man,’ one officer responded.
The six-minute video shows officers shouting back and forth, with furious onlookers and Charlebois as he protests his arrest.
Eventually an officer in a blue surgical mask grabs Charlebois to restrain him, and brings the vaccinated great-grandfather down to his knees in the middle of the street before handcuffing him against his van.
Charlebois sustained injuries to his arms, hands, shoulders and knees.
He was later fined $118 for ‘unnecessary noise’ but has not been criminally charged.