Freedom Convoy a 'relentless disturbance,' says people's commission - Action News
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Ottawa

Freedom Convoy a 'relentless disturbance,' says people's commission

The people tasked with penning a report into how the Freedom Convoy impacted city residents metthe public and media during the first day of the Ottawa People's Commission on Monday.

'For residents of Ottawa, this so-called freedom was the exact opposite'

Members of the Ottawa People's Commission at its first public meeting. (CBC)

The people tasked with penning a report into how the Freedom Convoy impacted city residents metthe public and media during the first day of the Ottawa People's Commission on Monday.

In the following months, three commissioners will hear from people impacted by protesters occupying downtown streets, and release a report near the one-year anniversary of the protests that arrived in Ottawa at the end of January and stayed for the first three weeks of February.

Debbie Owusu-Akyeeah, a longtime social justice advocate and executive director of the Canadian Centre for Gender and Sexual Diversity, says the commission will bring healing and justice by allowing people to share their experiences of living in the city during the protests.

Several investigations and inquiries into the Freedom Convoy are taking place at different levels of government, including a federal committee looking into the use of the Emergencies Act, but organizers of the people's commission say those do not focus onthe impact to residents.

A crowd of people outside in winter coats, some holding signs.
Counter-protestors gather in response to the Freedom Convoy anti-government protest in Ottawa on Feb. 12, 2022. (Patrick Doyle/The Canadian Press)

"What hasn't happened yet is that people-centred approach," Owusu-Akyeeahsaid, adding there continues to be anxiety and frustration stemming from February's protests even as further protests are being held and planned.

"It's that final report that is going to have recommendations from the community, that most likely,I can imaginewill call for accountability."

Community advocates and Centretown residents saidwhen access around the areaduring the winter's protests was restricted, it stopped prescriptions, food and personal support workers from getting to people.

"For residents of Ottawa, this so-called freedom was the exact opposite, instead it was a blockade, a relentless disturbance made ofhorns, fumes and hateful symbols,"saidTim McSorley, a member of the commission's oversight committee.

Owusu-Akyeeahwill work with two other commissioners and write a report of the findings. Leilani Farhais the global director of aninternational human rights organization and is the former UN special rapporteur on the right to housing. She will join Owusu-Akyeeah and Alex Neve, an adjunct professor in international human rights law at the University of Ottawa and Dalhousie University, as commissioners.

A website launched Mondaywith more details on the commissionersand the structure of the group.