Ottawa mayor declares state of emergency;Ottawa police limit access to downtown; Police officially charge Tamara Lich, Chris Barber, Pat King

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跟当权者讲民主,我们都太天真了。老百姓就安心交税讨生活吧。指挥棒挥向左,向右看的被打脸。君不见所有的人权组织都很安静吗?

古人云"天下乌鸦一般黑"看来还眞是那个理。
 
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跟当权者讲民主,我们都太天真了。老百姓就安心交税讨生活吧。指挥棒挥向左,向右看的被打脸。君不见所有的人权组织都很安静吗?

古人云"天下乌鸦一般黑"看来还眞是那个理。

98CDA1BA-E05B-4FB8-8030-13154C68CF0E.jpeg



信口開河可不好,加拿大人權自由聯盟第一時間就發表了聲明反對緊急狀態法。

還有,國會兩大反對黨,總共44%的議員投票要求政府順應抗議者的訴求。

以及四個省的省長公開反對緊急狀態。
 
差點忘了,渥太華這個緊急狀態令都已經頒布九天了
 
你懂什么?以为发布命令后,一定会立即动手?

8964北京戒戒严令是5月20日颁布的.
 

 
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RCMP and OPP set up command centre in Ottawa as police chief Peter Sloly resigns​


RCMP and OPP will work closely with the city's police to respond to the defiant protesters who remain in Ottawa
Author of the article: Tyler Dawson
Publishing date: Feb 15, 2022

he chief of the Ottawa police abruptly resigned Tuesday, while the Mounties and Ontario Provincial Police are working closely with the local force to respond to the chaotic antigovernment protest that continues to paralyze the downtown core.

Peter Sloly, who’s only held the job since October 2019, had come under heavy criticism for the perceived inaction of the Ottawa Police Service against the protesters who’ve occupied Ottawa for more than two weeks.

Sloly and the board reached a “mutually agreed upon separation,” the chair of the Ottawa Police Services Board, Diane Deans, said at a special meeting on Tuesday.

Steve Bell, a veteran senior police leader in Ottawa, will take on the role of interim chief as the police board searches for a new chief.

Bell thanked Sloly for his service, but said the Ottawa Police’s efforts to end the occupation in downtown Ottawa had now reached a turning point. “I believe we now have the resources and partners to bring this occupation to an end,” he said.

Earlier Tuesday Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said an integrated command centre has been set up so the RCMP and Ontario Provincial Police could work with the Ottawa police to respond to more demonstrators flowing into Canada’s capital city.

An earlier version of this story said RCMP and OPP were taking control of enforcement, but the Ottawa Police remains in control.

“I know that they’re working day and night to be sure that there is an operation that will be put into effect to restore public order,” Mendicino said.

“It isn’t easy. The illegal blockade has now become entrenched in the downtown core over the last three weeks.”

Mendicino says the federal government’s focus is ensuring the Ottawa police, as well as the RCMP and OPP, have all the tools necessary to restore public order in the city.

Authorities are now figuring out how best to use new powers granted through the Emergencies Act invoked by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday, to help remove scores of protest trucks that have clogged the city’s downtown for more than two weeks.

As early as Friday, Sloly still enjoyed the confidence of some on Ottawa’s city council, including Coun. Diane Deans, the chair of the police services board, outgoing Mayor Jim Watson and other members of the police services board. (Police report to them, not Ottawa city council.)

“They have been working very hard under very stressful circumstances. Everyone in OPS is extremely tired. This has gone on for 16 days with, right now, no end in sight, and they need help and resources,” Deans said.

But on the weekend, Ottawa residents frustrated with the blockades, noise and harrassment from protesters — and passive police response — took to the streets in counterprotest marches.

Sloly had blamed a lack of resources for the Ottawa Police Service’s inaction and had requested 1,800 additional officers and staff to be able to end the occupation of the streets around Parliament Hill.

Bill Blair, Canada’s minister of emergency preparedness, seemed to blame the municipal police in Ottawa for inaction. “We now have a situation where it’s clearly a very significant and serious public order event and we all need the police to do their job,” Blair said on Sunday.

“Ultimately, it comes down to the police need to restore order, to enforce the law,” he said.

Ottawa police, meanwhile, said it was struggling to deal with the 4,000-plus protesters.

“Demonstrators exhibited aggressive behaviour towards law enforcement including refusing to follow directions, overwhelming officers, and otherwise subverting enforcement efforts,” police said Saturday. “We have a plan to end this unlawful occupation and await the necessary reinforcements to do so.”

Sloly was the former deputy chief of the Toronto police, and was lauded, in his time in that city, as a progressive policing leader who’d angered more traditional police officers within that force.
 
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$14.1 million spent on police over 18 days of Ottawa convoy occupation​

Ted Raymond CTV News Ottawa Digital Multi-Skilled Journalist
Michael Woods CTV News Ottawa Digital Multi-Skilled Journalist
Published Tuesday, February 15, 2022 4:00AM EST
Last Updated Tuesday, February 15, 2022 5:59PM EST

The ongoing occupation of downtown Ottawa by the "Freedom Convoy" protest has cost the Ottawa Police Service more than $14.1 million so far, with no signs yet that the most ardent occupiers are leaving.

The figure was shared at Tuesday's special meeting of the Ottawa Police Services Board, which heard from top ranking members of the Ottawa Police Service, including newly named interim police chief Steve Bell, who is replacing Peter Sloly following his resignation as Ottawa's chief of police.

Ottawa police CAO Blair Dunker told the board the projected cost for the Ottawa Police Service to date has been about $785,000 per day. A previous estimate by police shared in the early days of the demonstration turned occupation was $800,000 per day.

It's now day 19 of the occupation. There are still hundreds of trucks and other vehicles on Wellington Street, in front of the Parliament buildings and the Prime Minister's Office, though police say the number of remaining occupiers has dwindled significantly since the weekend.

Still, police have shown no overt signs of moving to clear demonstrators out of the core occupation zone in the parliamentary district. There was some movement of trucks out of some residential areas in Centretown, but the trucks were simply moved to Wellington Street.

The Ottawa Police Service, and former chief Sloly, had repeatedly claimed they lacked the resources to effectively end the demonstration and had requested—and received—additional support from other jurisdictions, including the Ontario Provincial Police and the RCMP, which add to the cost of policing the ongoing occupation.

"As additional officers join, those costs will be going up. That's what we tallied, as of yesterday," Dunker said.

Dunker cautioned that this includes recorded costs only, so overtime costs, and any potential invoices by the RCMP are not included in the $14.1 million figure.

Dunker said the Ottawa Police Service is tracking all of its spending, and a financial update to the board is due in the coming months.

WE HAVE A PLAN: BELL

Bell suggested to the board that the Ottawa Police Service is now in a position to bring an end to the occupation.

"I believe we now have the resources and partners to bring a safe end to this occupation. The Ottawa police are ready, eager to do what is our part. With new leadership and stability from our command team, I’m confident that we can end this occupation," Bell said. "I can absolutely assure you that we do have a plan to end this illegal occupation in our streets and we continue to work with them to finalize, resource and implement that plan and remove the illegal occupation in our city."

Board Chair Diane Deans referred to the situation as a "carnival of chaos" and said the local police have not been effective.

"I am happy to say the RCMP and the OPP at the table, because frankly the response to this crisis so far has been ineffective at bringing this occupation to an end and restoring peace and security in Ottawa. The OPS has been unable to adequately enforce our laws and our residents continue to be terrorized," Deans said.

However, it remains unclear how the federal government's invocation of the never-before-used Emergencies Act will affect police enforcement.

Acting deputy chief Trish Ferguson said the police service is waiting for additional details on what the unprecedented move entails.

"We continue to await for official details before operationalizing it," Ferguson said. "We have been working with our legal team and those of our provincial and federal partners to understand implications of various orders and actions and consider the impacts on our ultimate mission."

Ferguson told the board that as of Tuesday morning, police had 172 active criminal investigations related to the occupation, 18 arrests had been made and 33 charges had been laid. With the help of Ottawa Bylaw and Regulatory Services, nearly 3,000 tickets had been issued. None of the charges to date include unlawful assembly, according to Bell.

Ferguson also said the number of occupiers had shrunk significantly since the weekend.

"The number of demonstrators was less than 150 in the overnight hours and the numbers of vehicles in the core has declined to approximately 360," she said. "This is down substantially from the beginning of the demonstration where there were over 4,000 vehicles in the downtown core."

Speaking on CTV News at Five, Former Ottawa police chief Charles Bordeleau told Matt Skube that with trucks more consolidated on Wellington Street, the imprint of the demonstration has been further contained and police have an opportunity to shut it down peacefully.

"I’m hopeful, like many other residents are hopeful, that there will be a move to shut this down," he said.

"I hesitate to put a timetable on it," he added. "But suffice it to say, I’m confident that there’s a window of opportunity that’s presenting itself, and the Ottawa Police Service hopefully will take action along with its partners."

PATIENCE IS WEARING THIN: DEANS


Deans told Bell patience is wearing thin and the public is eager to see more action by police to bring the occupation to an end as soon as possible.

"One of my frustrations has been when we expect action, we don't see it. It's a problem," Deans said. "This weekend, when we said that we were going to treat the protesters more strongly than we have in the past, we had a chaotic carnival on Parliament Hill. I wanted to go up there and pop that damn hot tub myself and unplug the bouncy castle. And I couldn't understand why we weren't doing just those things that were poking the fingers in the eye of our democracy, of our parliament and our city."

Deans said she wants to see police step up enforcement. Bell assured her the police service is working toward the goal of getting the occupiers out of Ottawa.

"They are not welcome in our streets anymore," he said.

But he stressed this kind of occupation is unprecedented in the city's history.

"Nobody across Canada has ever dealt with an occupation on this scope, scale, size, with this type of equipment or vehicles in an area. This is unprecedented," he said. "This has not been managed by any police service across Canada in the history of our country."

Bell's response to numerous questions about enforcement taken to date, or the lack thereof, was to say there would one day be a review of the Ottawa Police Service's response to the demonstration, which he welcomes, but his primary focus now is bringing the occupation to an end.

Bell claimed there is "no right of return" or an "in-and-out pass" for people in the area of the demonstration, despite evidence that people have been coming and going from the protest site regularly.

"When we either negotiate them to leave or they do leave on their own accord, they are not allowed back and there is no one that is allowed to come in and fill their space," he said.

As an example, a DJ who was playing for the crowd last weekend told CTV News Ottawa's Graham Richardson police allowed him back in a day after he was fined.

Party back on at Rideau and Sussex @OttawaPolice let the dj back in. It is lit as the kids say #ottnews #onpoli #OttawaConvoy pic.twitter.com/xagXdgfq0q
— Graham Richardson (@grahamctv) February 13, 2022

EMERGENCIES ACT INVOKED


Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked the act—a first in Canadian history—on Monday. The move enables the RCMP to enforce municipal bylaws and provincial offences and prohibits taking part in a public assembly where it’s considered a breach of peace and goes beyond lawful protest, among other measures.

The Emergencies Act does not make the RCMP the lead agency, nor does it bring in the military.

Some premiers publicly opposed the move, but Tuesday morning, Premier Doug Ford said it will give police "the tools that they need to move the occupiers on."

"I don’t care about the politics. Whatever it takes to give the police the tools to get these people out of there," Ford told reporters. The province declared a state of emergency last week, and the city declared one last weekend.

Sloly had said during other emergency declarations that the Ottawa Police Service lacks the resources to fully deal with the protest downtown. Last week, the city appealed to the federal and provincial governments for 1,800 additional police officers, including 100 civilian members, to help bolster the ranks. Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said the federal government has sent "three installments of reinforcements" to ensure OPS has the support they need.

"But, I think, as we've seen, there have been many, many challenges on the ground to restoring public order on the streets," he said.

Trudeau acknowledged a "high level of frustration" on behalf of residents of Ottawa with regard to police enforcement downtown, but he said he believed the new measures brought in by the Emergencies Act would help.

"It is important that the police of jurisdiction, working with the OPP and the RCMP, are able to put an end to these illegal protests," he said. "The specific and limited measures that we are putting forward today as part of the Emergencies Act will give them further tools that in their coordinated response between the Ottawa Police Service, the OPP and the RCMP working together, should be able to respond to these concerns by the citizens of Ottawa."

Organizers of the protest have said they would not be swayed by the invocation of the Emergencies Act. Convoy organizer Tamara Lich urged protesters and truckers to stand their ground at a press conference on Monday.

“There are no threats that will frighten us. We will hold the line,” Lich said. “To our truckers and friends on Parliament Hill, do not give into fear and threats.”

Protesters who spoke to CTV News Monday evening said they had no intention of leaving until their demand to drop all COVID-19 public health measures is met.

Some movement of trucks was observed Monday. Trucks parked in residential areas were moved to Wellington Street, as part of a deal between Lich and Mayor Jim Watson to help alleviate some of the pressure on residential streets.


COUNCIL MEETING POSTPONED

A special meeting of Ottawa city council that was to be held Tuesday afternoon has been postponed until Wednesday.

A notice to councillors said Mayor Jim Watson cancelled the meeting "to allow Council to receive a more comprehensive update" following Trudeau invoking the Emergencies Act.

There were some last-minute changes to the availability of key personnel, partly due to the police board meeting being rescheduled for later Tuesday, the notice said.

"Further, yesterday's announcement requires more work and analysis to provide Council and the public with a better understanding of the tools available under the Emergencies Act."

The meeting will be rescheduled for Wednesday at 4 p.m.

One of the items expected to be brought forward is a motion by councillors Carol Anne Meehan and Matt Luloff to request the aid of the Canadian Armed Forces "in aid of the civil power." It would require appealing to the provincial attorney general, who could make a request to the Chief of Defence Staff.

Trudeau said Monday invoking the Emergencies Act would not bring the military to Ottawa to help deal with the downtown occupation, nor would he speculate what might be required to reach that point.


CLOSURES


The Rideau Centre, Ottawa City Hall, and two Ottawa public library branches remain closed today.

The city of Ottawa says Ottawa City Hall, the underground parking garage and the Rink of Dreams are closed until further notice.

The Ottawa Public Library Main and Rideau branches remain closed.

Ottawa Public Health’s vaccination clinic at the University of Ottawa Minto Sports Complex will re-open today. The Lowertown Vaccine Hub, located at the Jules Morin Fieldhouse on 400 Clarence St. E., will re-open as scheduled on Wednesday.

The detours of OC Transpo routes 10, 11, and 16 will be modified based on more reliable access to roads in Centretown, including sections of Bank, Gladstone, Albert and Bronson. Maps of the revised detours are available on octranspo.com.
 
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广播里说,警方后援到了,人数暂时保密。
 
广播里说,警方后援到了,人数暂时保密。

温莎稳住了,省警骑警就腾出手来了,各个击破。

大限已过。
 
广播里说,警方后援到了,人数暂时保密。
如果结合这两件事看,Peter Sloly 其实一直是不想作为。前些天CTV采访他的时候说人们觉得你们该做得更好,使其非常尴尬。
 
温莎稳住了,省警骑警就腾出手来了,各个击破。

大限已过。
又来吓唬韭菜了?要不是土豆给浇点汽油,卡车司机本来已经玩累了。
 
如果结合这两件事看,Peter Sloly 其实一直是不想作为。

在Board会议上已经明确他领导不力。他辞职比被炒体面。

估计这会议做出下步行动计划了。
 
如果结合这两件事看,Peter Sloly 其实一直是不想作为。
你让他咋作为,坐军车上戴钢盔拿冲锋枪吗?土工杀人是保万年江山,一个警察局长图个啥?
 
在Board会议上已经明确他领导不力。他辞职比被炒体面。
土总让鸡佬给力,鸡佬让警长给力,警长躺平。这事因土豆而起,也必因他结束。但自由党不比共产党,杀人诛心勾当干的还不到位。
 
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