Ottawa police have declared an "end" to thetrucker protests that plagued the city for three weeks.- Hundreds of officers arrived in force to disperse the crowds, using pepper spray and mounted police over the weekend.
Police dispersed truckers blocking the streets of Ottawa to
"Freedom Convoy" demonstrators had for three weeks plunged the Canadian capital into gridlock, prompting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to invoke emergency powers that allowed his administration to overrule civil rights.
On Friday and Saturday, police deployed pepper spray as they moved into the downtown core areas and the streets outside parliament, where the bulk of the protestors had taken up position. Officers also towed away 76 vehicles, the Ottawa police tweeted.
Police said that the protestors had been "aggressive and assaultive," and mounted officers had to arrive to "create a safe distance" between the crowd and the police line. According to the law enforcement agency, they also arrested someone who threw a bicycle at a horse in an attempt to injure the animal.
—Ottawa Police (@OttawaPolice) February 18, 2022
Authorities said on Saturday that no one was seriously injured or passed away during the clashes.
However, the country's Special Investigations Unit, an official civilian oversight agency that investigates when civilians are hurt or killed by law enforcement, said it is looking into an incident between a mounted officer and a 49-year-old woman, as well as another event where less-lethal firearms were discharged.
A video on Twitter shows mounted police driving back protestors before officers on foot pressed forward into the crowd, shoving the demonstrators. A man with a bicycle is seen at the front of the crowd, though it's not clear if he was related to the incident mentioned by police.
—Candice Malcolm (@CandiceMalcolm) February 19, 2022
By Saturday afternoon, the protestors had been pushed out of the streets in front of Parliament Hill, The Associated Press reported.
One demonstrator, Jeremy Glass of Shelburne, Ontario, told the AP that protestors had lost control of their main camp, where they ran supplies and logistics for truckers stationed on the streets. Another organizer, Tom Marazzo, said his group had decided to "peacefully withdraw," The AP reported.
"This unlawful occupation is over," Interim Police Chief Steve Bell declared on Saturday, though he said small pockets of protestors remained across the city. "We will continue with our mission until it is complete."
In an update on Sunday, Bell said the authorities had fenced off downtown core areas and were maintaining a "very heavy police presence" there to prevent the protestors from returning.
Of those arrested, 107 people face a combined total of 389 charges including obstructing police, disobeying court orders, and mischief, Bell said.
The "Freedom Convoy" protests, which began in January over vaccine restrictions, have grown to encompass demonstrations against a variety of issues related to Trudeau and public health measures.
With emergency powers in play, Trudeau's administration has focused on stifling the protestors' funding and freezing bank accounts related to the convoys while overhauling cryptocurrency and crowdfunding regulations to ban donations from flowing in.