Arrests have been made after a key border crossing between the US and Canada has been impeded by protesters

Arrests have been made after a key border crossing between
the US and Canada has been impeded by protesters 1
Windsor Police said arrests have been made at the foot of the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor, Canada.
“Enforcement actions continue at the demonstration area with arrests being made,” Windsor Police tweeted Sunday morning. “Vehicles being towed. Please continue avoiding the area.”
[Previous story, published at 5:52 a.m. ET]
A major border crossing between Canada and the US remained partially impeded Sunday morning despite police efforts to end a blockade by Canadian protesters who oppose Covid-19 mitigation measures in the country as officials prepare for the possibility of more demonstrations elsewhere.
Canadian police moved Saturday to clear protesters from the Ambassador Bridge, which spans the border between Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, following a nearly week-long blockade that snarled traffic and slowed supply chains in both countries.
Protesters seemed undeterred at critical bridge to US hours past a deadline set by a Canadian judge
But Canada-bound traffic at the busiest border crossing in North America was still suspended early Sunday, according to a Canadian website that tracks traffic at border crossings. US-bound traffic was open, according to the US Customs and Border Protection website.
A judge had ordered the demonstrators to leave the Ambassador Bridge by 7 p.m. Friday, and some protesters moved away on their own as police approached Saturday morning.
Some pedestrians remained near an intersection on a road leading to the bridge later Saturday, including some talking to or yelling at a line of standing police officers. Others sang the Canadian national anthem or shouted, “Freedom!”
A 27-year-old man was arrested “for a criminal offence in relation to the demonstration,” Windsor Police said Saturday, without providing further details. “Officers will intervene when necessary to ensure the safety of the public & maintain peace & order,” police said on Twitter.
The protests in Canada began more than two weeks ago when truckers converged on the capital city of Ottawa to demonstrate their opposition to a new rule requiring them to be fully vaccinated against Covid-19 or face quarantine in their homes for two weeks when they return to Canada after crossing the US border.
Since then, protests have expanded into several different cities and border crossing with people voicing their opposition to Canada’s Covid-19 mitigation measures, including restrictions on gatherings and mask mandates.
Why the Ambassador Bridge is crucial to two nations' economies
Canada has one of the highest vaccination rates in the world, with about 4 in every 5 Canadians fully vaccinated, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. And nearly 90% of the country’s truckers are fully vaccinated and eligible to cross the border, according to the Canadian government.
Still, the protesters have been vocal and used their truck horns to express their opposition, prompting a judge in Ottawa to rule Monday that they must stop honking for 10 days.
Protesters have also used semitrailers — and sometimes farm equipment and other vehicles — to block crossings between Emerson, Manitoba, and Pembina, North Dakota, as well as at the Coutts access point between Alberta and Montana.
And about 50 vehicles have blocked access to the Canadian-US border at Emerson since Thursday, the Manitoba Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Saturday.
The blockade has alarmed political leaders, including in the US.
“We are at an economic crisis because of this illegal blockade,” which is becoming a homeland security issue, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer told CNN Friday.
Trucks displaying the Canadian national flag drive by as anti-vaccine mandate and anti-government protesters demonstrate on February 12 on Highway 15 near the Pacific Highway Border Crossing on the US-Canada border with Washington State in Surrey, British Columbia, Canada.

Canadian officials discuss additional response

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other government officials were briefed on the law enforcement action in Windsor Saturday, a statement from his office said.
“The Prime Minister stressed that border crossings cannot, and will not, remain closed, and that all options remain on the table,” the statement said.
Workers in Michigan could lose up to $51 million in wages this week because of trucker protest, group estimates
The ministers also discussed “further immediate actions the federal government is considering” and will meet again Sunday.
Additionally, the statement said the Ontario Provincial Police, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Ottawa Police Service established an Integrated Command Centre (ICC) to address the escalating tensions in Ottawa, where more than 4,000 demonstrators were present throughout Saturday, police said in a news release.
“Safety concerns – arising from aggressive, illegal behaviour by many demonstrators – limited police enforcement capabilities,” the Ottawa Police Service said. “We expect that the ICC will result in a significantly enhanced ability of our police service to respond to the current situation in our city.”
Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson told CNN that he expected even more protests as the weekend unfolds.
“It’s completely unacceptable,” Watson said. “Particularly in the neighborhoods where some of the protesters are going into restaurants and refusing to wear a mask and harassing staff and really being belligerent to the residents of our city.”
A demonstrator lets off fireworks during a protest by truck drivers over pandemic health rules and the Trudeau government, outside the parliament of Canada in Ottawa on February 12.

Officials in US ‘ready’ if similar protests break out

Meanwhile in the US, officials are gearing up to potentially face similar protests, including one possibly affecting Super Bowl in southern California Sunday.
DHS bulletin warns trucker convoy could disrupt Super Bowl Sunday
“The convoy will potentially begin in California as early as mid-February and arrive in Washington, DC, as late as mid-March, potentially impacting the Super Bowl LVI scheduled for 13 February and the State of the Union Address scheduled for 1 March,” a bulletin from the Department of Homeland Security said.
In addition, a group in the US said it is organizing two trucker convoys that will head to the US-Canadian border in Buffalo, New York, this weekend.
However, the city said Friday no group had not applied for permits to hold events.
“Nor have the organizers contacted our Special Events Office to arrange for the appropriate insurance and public safety planning that is required for all events in the City to ensure the health and safety of residents and visitors,” Buffalo city spokesperson Michael DeGeorge told CNN. “It is always a concern when laws that are designed to keep people and property protected are willfully ignored.”
“We’re ready for these trucks, but our goal is to keep our roadways open and to make sure that residents and visitors are safe and healthy,” Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown told CNN Saturday.

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