Protestors
say it loud but peacefully ahead of Bush visit
Andrew Thomson
CanWest News Service; Ottawa Citizen
Monday,
August 20, 2007
OTTAWA
-- A loud, but peaceful, crowd gathered Sunday on Parliament Hill to oppose talks
on continental integration while anarchists claimed responsibility for weekend
vandalism against Ottawa businesses connected to the Security and Prosperity Partnership.
Between
1,000 to 2,000 demonstrators -- guarded by a sizable police presence -- got a
head start on the North American leaders' summit, which begins Monday in Montebello,
Que. with meetings between Stephen Harper, George W. Bush, and Felipe Calderon.
The
nascent partnership plan, which seeks to harmonize certain security and regulatory
protocols between the three countries, is expected to figure prominently on the
agenda.
"Rallies
at Parliament Hill are notoriously difficult to draw large crowds and I was impressed
... because there were events happening in so many other centres," Green
Party Leader Elizabeth May said.
She
cited no-fly lists as one example of an "Orwellian" chill forming over
North America.
"This
is a very anti-democratic process," May said. "Mr. Harper, as a minority
prime minister, has no business giving away the sovereignty of Canada in these
negotiations."
Ottawa
police and RCMP officers, buoyed by memories of protests during the G20 finance
minister's summit in November 2001 and the G8 in the summer of 2002, fanned out
across downtown well beforehand. They were reinforced by Toronto, York, and Peel
police units.
The
Centennial Flame was covered by steel fencing and green tarp as a safety precaution.
Public access to Parliament Hill was limited to the front lawn and steps, with
officers and their video cameras and binoculars perched atop the Centre and East
Blocks.
"This
is a family-friendly, peaceful demonstration and I would ask that everyone respect
these parameters," demonstration organizer Celeste Cete told the crowd before
marching on the Mexican and U.S. embassies.
Three
men were arrested: a 21-year-old male charged with carrying a concealed knife,
a 17-year-old young offender seized on an unrelated outstanding arrest warrant,
and a 16-year-old charged with mischief for allegedly painting graffiti on the
pavement during the march.
The
protest line snaked along downtown streets before swinging around the U.S. Embassy
to Parliament Hill.
Police
escorts led the way on foot, bicycle, and motorcycle. Dozens of RCMP, Ottawa,
and Toronto officers stood behind reinforced barricades outside the embassy as
the demonstrators marched past curious tourists and Sunday market shoppers.
One
group, mostly dressed in black with bandannas and balaclavas, left the main march
and were carefully watched by authorities the entire time.
Postings
to an anarchist website had detailed a series of attacks Saturday morning against
Ottawa businesses associated with the North American Competitiveness Council,
a corporate advisory group attached to the SPP.
Windows
were smashed at the Bell Canada building, according to the anonymous authors.
At two Scotiabank branches, the door locks were glued and the entrance walls were
spray painted and paint bombed.
Ottawa
police said no such incidents had been brought to their attention yet.
Sunday's
protest was serene by comparison; dogs and baby strollers were far more common
than broken windows or tear gas pellets, the fear of police and downtown business
owners.
The
diverse crowd ranged from organized labour and the Council of Canadians to environmentalists,
communists, and the Raging Grannies. Demonstrators were from as far afield as
southern Ontario, Quebec, Vancouver, and Mexico.
A
supportive message was read from 93-year-old William Commanda, senior elder of
the Algonquin Nation of the Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg. The in-person speakers included
Council of Canadians chairwoman Maude Barlow and Chris Jones of the Canadian Peace
Alliance, who called the SPP talks "horrible, incestuous negotiations."
Kyle
McQueston, 22, rode his bike three-and-a-half days from Toronto to demonstrate.
"The
secrecy, the lies, the undemocratic approach," the student and environmental
activist said when asked about problems with the SPP.
A
separate group of demonstrators started their "Bike to Bush" mission,
a 71-kilometre ride from Gatineau, Que. to Montebello.
Two
designated protest areas, each able to hold about 2,000 people, have been cleared
near the Chateau Montebello. A video feed will beam the demonstrations inside
for summit participants.
Protest
flotillas are also planned on the Ottawa River with Gaetan Menard, secretary-treasurer
of the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada, among those slated
to pass the hotel compound on his own five-metre boat.
The
City of Ottawa has cautioned residents to expect delays over the next two days,
especially downtown. There were going to be some street closures during the summit
and outdoor mailboxes downtown have been removed until Wednesday morning.
Airspace
restrictions are also scheduled at the Ottawa airport both days as Bush arrives
and departs. In Montebello, truck traffic on Hwy. 148 is being re-routed into
Ontario.
Ottawa
Citizen