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OttawaAnalysis

9 months later, convoy organizers express little sympathy for downtown dwellers

Two very different impressions of last winter's convoy protest in Ottawa have emerged during testimony at the Emergencies Act inqury. During testimony this week, protest organizers mostly stuck to their side of the story.

2 distinct impressions of last winter's protest on display at Emergencies Act inquiry

A group of four people walk outside.
From left, Keith Wilson, Chris Barber, Tom Marazzo and Tamara Lich arrive for the Public Order Emergency Commission in Ottawa on Wednesday. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Downtown Ottawa in late January and much of February 2022 was either a peace-fuelled hug fest so beautiful to behold that it still induces tears, or a dangerous cauldron of hate and aggression that made life hell for the 18,000 or so people who call the city centre home. It truly wasa matter of perspective.

These days, that great divide is never more apparent than in front of Library and Archives Canada on Wellington Street, where one woman stands on the sidewalk and insults the convoy leaders by name as they emerge from the building's front door to stand around in tight groups, talking and smoking.

She calls them "terrorists."They call themselves "freedom fighters,"and they mostly ignore her.

This is the setting for the Public Order Emergency Commission, which just concluded its third full week of testimony, and where the gulf in memory and experiencebetween those who came to Ottawa to protest, and those who live here, has at times appeared just as wide.

Few criminal charges

Early in the proceedings, Zexi Li, the federal public servant who came to embody the fear and frustration felt by many downtown dwellers when sheagreed to lend her name to the successful injunctionthat banned horn-honking north of the Queensway, likened the scene outside her apartment buildingto the dystopian horror film seriesThe Purge.

Brendan Miller, a lawyer for the convoy organizers, has consistently challenged that casting of events, insistingon a narrow legal definition of terms such as "assault" and "violence." Having strangers shout at you on the street to take off your maskmay or may not fit into one of those categories, depending on your perspective.

A protester taking part in what became the Freedom Convoy.
One protest leader told the public inquiry that the movement was all about 'peace, love, unity and freedom.' Some downtown residents who lived through it have a different perspective. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Miller has grilled several witnesses on the number of criminal charges laidduring the three-plus weeks that the protesters were in town.He seems to be driving at the point that, because there were relatively few charges, things couldn't have been that bad.

But the commission has also heard from senior police officials who testified that the situation downtown was at times so volatile that they wouldn't risk their officers' safety by sending them into the crowdto clamp down on unsafe or illegal activity. That only added to the fearand abandonmentmany residents were feeling, according to earlier testimony.

What honking?

Perhaps unsurprisingly, that's not how the convoy organizers, who testified this week, rememberedit at all.

According to Benjamin Dichter, the Ontario trucker and podcast producerwho steered communications for the group, the movement's central tenetswere"peace, love, unity and freedom." Hecompared the vibe in downtown Ottawa to Grateful Dead concerts he's attended. Another witness likened it to Canada's Woodstock.

Dichter, who spent much of his time in Ottawa in hotel rooms due to a broken ankle, described Ottawa's downtownas "eerily silent" on one of the nights he did venture out.

"If I'm staying in downtown Ottawa right in the core of all of it and I'm not hearing honking, I don't knowwhere the honking's coming from," he testified Thursday under cross-examination by Christine Johnson, co-counsel for a coalition of Ottawa residents and businesses.

"But you're aware that many residents were expressing concern that they were hearing frequent, loud honking and they were disturbed by that honking?" Johnson asked.

"I don't want to project motives onto people. I would just say that I disagree, and perhaps there's other motives for it. I don't know," Dichter replied.

Johnson then reminded Dichterthe title of his forthcoming book about the protest isHonking for Freedom.

Sleep deprivation

At times, it seemed protest leaders were either unaware, unconcerned or unwilling to acknowledge that downtown Ottawa residents had also suffered under pandemic restrictions.

Presented with a video in which he appears to be laughing at residents who hadn'tsleptin days because of the honking, prominent protest participant Pat King doubled down.

"We'd beenlocked down for two years and people are complaining that theyheard horns for 10 days. Did they remember what we went throughfor the last two years? What's a little bit of horns for 10days?" he testifiedWednesday.

Lich says she didn't notice honking horns from hotel room

2 years ago
Duration 1:08
Tamara Lich, one of the organizers of the self-described "Freedom Convoy," was asked about the disruption of honking horns during the truck protest.

Asked earlier that daywhether he was aware of threats made against residents and public officials, as well as the incessant blaring of high-decibel truck and even train horns, lawyer Keith Wilson, who represented convoy organizers including Tamara Lich and Chris Barber during the protest, replied that he was "aware of the allegations."

"I'm also aware of what I experienced, which was Canadians, particularly immigrants of all ethnic backgrounds, coming together in a very peaceful, respectful way with deep concern about what the federalgovernment and governments were doing to their rights and freedoms," he added.

'What's a little bit of horns for ten days?' Pat King on the protest convoy

2 years ago
Duration 0:20
In his testimony before the Emergencies Act inquiry, King compared the two years of lockdowns to ten days of protesters blowing truck horns in Ottawa to argue that the lockdowns were harder on Canadians.

'Families torn apart'

Lich, whose highly anticipated testimony wrapped up Friday morning, told the commission she never intended to break the law or inflict harm on Ottawa residents. Her sole motivation, she testified, was the desperate suffering of ordinaryCanadians under the federal government's unreasonable COVID mandates.

"I was seeing families torn apart. The suicides in my hometown were so numerous thatthey stopped reporting them. Elderly people were dying by themselves in long-term care facilities and saying goodbye over iPads," Lich told the commission through tears.

In Ottawa, people from all walks of life shared similar stories, she testified later.

"I encountered hundreds andhundreds of Ottawa residents when I was here, thanking me,thanking us, saying that we gave them hope."

Asked if she'd also witnessed acts of violence or harassment toward Ottawa residents, Lich said no.

Commission counsel John Mather pressed on. "When you hear the citizens of Ottawanot all of them, I appreciate that but when you hearsome of the citizens of Ottawa say, 'I felt harassed, I feltintimidated, I felt unsafe,'do you believe them?"

"I believe that's how they felt," Lich replied. "Obviously, thelast thing that we ever wanted to do when we came here was tomake the citizens of Ottawa feel that way."