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Tuesday, 8 October 2019
Extinction Rebellion rallies Halifax and around Canada
The following is reposted from Judy Haiven's blog Another ruined dinner party
initially published in NSAdvocate (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
KJIPUKTUK (Halifax) – On Monday in Darmouth, it was the police who
closed the MacDonald Bridge – not the protesters. Police also closed
bike and pedestrian access to the bridge in both directions, which
seemed needless and punitive. Especially since earlier the protesters
had promised to allow this traffic. By contrast, in Toronto, the
protesters and police allowed bike and pedestrian traffic over the
blocked bridge. Why couldn’t Halifax police do this?
About one hundred activists, many with signs that said Extinction
Rebellion, marched from the parking lot at the Zatzman Sportsplex early
this morning. Extinction Rebellion is an international organisation
dedicated to non-violent civil disobedience for action on climate
change,
Near the bridge, there was a phalanx of more than 40 police blocking
entry, including a dozen cops who stood behind their bicycles to
barricade the toll booths. Photo Facebook
The police lined up in an aggressive manner, shoulder to shoulder
right in front of the toll booths. This meant the protesters were
sandwiched into an area about the size of a school gym. Protesters were
stuck between the police in front of the toll booths and the other cops
who milled about their cruisers parked across the intersection of Wyse
Road and Nantucket Avenue. The intersection itself was deserted –with
buses on detour and only one lane open to traffic on Wyse Road.
Police were everywhere, in uniform and in plain clothes. I overheard
one, dressed in a trenchcoat, laughingly tell another cop to wear his
ear-plugs if he couldn’t be bothered to listen to the activists’ chants.
It was a peaceful protest, with dozens sitting on blankets on the
road in the designated space. In the crowd were young people, and about
20 seniors. Activists sang songs, and made speeches about the climate
emergency. With no sound system, they had to shout into a hand held
megaphone. One woman threaded through the crowd with a loaf of homemade
bread and a slab of butter; some protesters gladly took a slice or
two. Other women offered apples, oranges and muffins to the crowd.
Extinction Rebellion called for protests world-wide. In Edmonton,
nine protesters managed to block the Walterdale Bridge for an hour
during the busy morning rush. In Toronto, dozens blocked the Bloor
Street Viaduct – a main route for commuters. In Vancouver, nearly 200
activists poured onto both sides of the Burrard Street Bridge and are
still holding it (as of Monday 7:00 pm Atlantic time).
As recently as last Friday, Dan Kinsella Halifax’s new police chief wrote in the StarMetro,
“At the core of good police work is an integrated response approach
which uses… respectful interactions and community co-operation and
goodwill.” Little to none of that goodwill was evident at the Dartmouth
demonstration today. He also wrote about “our officers [using] empathy,
concern and kindness,” and the necessary “shift from a …command and
control policing model to a community-focused, people oriented
approach.”
Halifax police not only prevented cyclists and pedestrians from using
the bridge, but police also arrested 18 activists– probably more than
30% of protesters. Why did the police decide to criminalize peaceful
protest after three hours? The police action was punitive and even
provocative. Clearly in using a command and control method to contain
and punish activists – it seems the chief has some explaining to do.
In Toronto and other cities in Canada, the police seemed to do more
to consider the communities’ needs to peacefully protest; there were few
to no arrests.
The attitude of Chief Kinsella is more ominous when we recall that he
said little about the harm that police street checks have done to
racialized citizens of HRM.
Both the RCMP and the Halifax Regional Police still refuse to
apologise for street checks against African-Nova Scotians. The 2019
Wortley Report shows that African Nova Scotians are stopped by police
six times more often than white people.
Chief Kinsella, though, does not want to jump to any conclusions. He
has said that before making any decisions on street checks, he wants to
speak with members of the African-Nova Scotian community. Let us hope –
unlike with the climate protesters — he uses some of the “empathy,
concern and kindness” he wrote about.
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