Small but noisy band of stalwarts vow to keep up protest outside Russian Embassy, consulate - Action News
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Ottawa

Small but noisy band of stalwarts vow to keep up protest outside Russian Embassy, consulate

Nearly every day since the war in Ukraine began, a hardy group of protesters has stood outside Russia's embassy and consulate in Ottawa. They want the people inside those buildings to face the truth, but is the message getting through?

7 months into Russia's grinding war on Ukraine, these Ottawa protesters are standing firm

'Im not so naive that I think anything I do is going to stop the war, but my goal is to be present and to witness whats going on,' said protester Flora Benoit, seen here standing across Range Road from the Russian consulate in Ottawa on Sept. 23. (Alistair Steele/CBC)

Last Friday Day 212 of Russia's bloody invasion of neighbouring Ukraine retired United Church minister Karen Niven-Wigston did what she'd done for most of the previous 211 days: She unfurled her blue and yellow Ukrainian flag and stoodin a place where she knew the gesture couldn't be ignored.

Most afternoons, Niven-Wigston joins a small but dedicated band of protesters outside the steel fence of the Russian Embassy on Charlotte Street in Ottawa.

That day,they'ddecided to move a short distance down Range Road to gather across from the Russian consulate, a grey stucco house that might itself go unnoticed were it not for the vivid banner reading "Stop Putin's War"planted along the sidewalk in front of it.

The mood among theprotesters their numbers fluctuate, but on this day there were about 15 was upbeat and collegial, even jovial, despite the gravity of their message. They waved their flags and cheered when passing motorists honked in support, as nearly every one did.

One man was dressed as a clown, complete with red nose,balloons and a horn of his own that he would honk in reply.

"I think a sense of humour really binds us together,"said Niven-Wigstonas she paused to wave at a passing car.

"We get a lot of support as you will see, just with peace signs or honking, and basically we feel we are here to represent all of those people who can't be here."

Protesters erected this banner outside the Russian consulate in Ottawa last week. (Alistair Steele/CBC)

But their message is equally aimed at the Russian diplomats and consular staff inside thesebuildings, and the late afternoon protests are timed to confront them as they head home for the day.

'Kill them with kindness'

With pointed slogans such as "Putin's cowards work here," the protesters don't pull any punches, though some do opt for a kinder, gentler strategy.

"Personally, my approach has always been to kill them with kindness, so just annoyingly friendly," said Angela Kalyta, another regular protester, who wore a traditional floral crown called a vinok.

Kalyta, a PhDstudent who lives nearby,said she likes to smile, flash peace signs and even blow kisses to the Russians as they drive away.

"At first they generally tried to ignore us," she said. "They'd roll their eyes at me, but then they started waving back."

Kalyta, one of the few regular protesters with Ukrainian roots,discovered the previous day that her name had been added to the growing list of Canadians sanctioned by Russia, and believes she earned the censure when she was quoted last month in theKyiv Post.

"So I'm now banned from Russia for my activities here," she said.

'Its not the most important thing, its not anything heroic compared to the things happening in Ukraine, but its what we can do,' said Kalyta, another regular at the protests. (Alistair Steele/CBC)

The article focused on an incidentin Ottawa in which three young men driving in a car with diplomatic licence plates were photographed spray-painting black a small blue and yellow bicycle chained to a post in front of the Russian Embassy.

The bike had been left there to commemorate the hundreds of Ukrainian children known to have died in the war.

The men also painted a Z and a V on the sidewalk, patriotic symbols of support for Russia's "special military operation" in Ukraine. Activists have photographed the same black sedan entering and exiting the embassy compound, and have shared the images with CBC.

Allegations from Russian Embassy

More recently, Russia's ambassador to Canada,Oleg Stepanov,toldRussian state-owned news agency Sputnikthat someone had tossed a Molotov cocktail over the embassy's fence in the early morning hours of Sept. 12, but that it had failed to fully ignite.

The embassy provided CBC with surveillance videos of the alleged attack.RCMP have confirmed they're investigating theincident.

WATCH | The Russian Embassy's video:

Video purportedly shows Molotov cocktail thrown at Russian Embassy

2 years ago
Duration 0:18
The Russian Embassy in Ottawa on Monday released surveillance video footage of what it says is an unknown person throwing what appears to be an incediary projectile onto the embassy grounds.

Russia's Foreign Affairs Ministry has alleged police in Ottawa haveturned a blind eye to "aggressive demonstrators," and complainedCanadian authorities have failed to prevent"hostile actions" against its diplomatic staff.

In a statement provided to CBC on Wednesday, the Russian Embassy said the protesters "demonstrate increasingly provocative and aggressive behavior"including "shouting and insulting with obscene language."

The embassy claims there have also been "incidents of attacking cars of the Embassy, blocking access to and out of diplomatic territory, damaging property with paint [and] throwing eggs.Some demonstrators made photos of passengers in diplomatic vehicles and tried to scare the children with threats, which could be described as harassment of minors."

The embassy says it has reported all of these alleged incidents to RCMP, and believes investigations are under way.

"We hope that those who violated the Canadian law will be duly prosecuted through the court system," the embassy said.

On Friday, an RCMPcruiser and an Ottawa police SUVsat in a parking lot near the consulate, but officers didn't intervene. Protesters said one of the officers told them there'd been a complaint from the consulate not the first, they said, and likely not the last.

"What they say about us is overblown, to put it politely," said Niven-Wigston.

On Monday, Ottawa police told CBCany information about calls for service from either the Russian Embassy or its consulate could only be obtained through an access to information request. On Wednesday, RCMP said it"maintains an open line of communication as and when required with all missions, including embassies and consulates," but could not confirm or discuss any specific calls for service.

A group of people waving Ukrainian flags stands beside a road on a sunny day.
Protesters gather outside the Russian consulate on Range Road in Ottawa. They turn out rain or shine, and have done so nearly every day since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24. (Alistair Steele/CBC)

According to protesters, any aggression has beenstrictly one-way.

Flora Benoit, another regular who lives nearby,described some embassy staff as "just nasty" toward the group, and said protesters sometimes have to leap out of the way of vehicles entering and exiting the embassy compound.

"If you don't jump out of the way, you'll be hit," said Benoit, who uses a megaphone to blare music ranging from John Lennon's Imagineto Bayraktar, a jaunty ode to theTurkish-made combat drone that has been used to great effectby the Ukrainians against the Russian invaders.

One of them came up to us and said, 'Who's paying you to protest?'- Karen Niven-Wigston

"They don't like that," the retired federal public servant explained, describing one run-in with an embassy staffer. "He said, 'You know, your music is violent.'"

Niven-Wigston recalled another confrontation outside the embassy on Russia Day in June.

"One of them came up to us and said, 'Who's paying you to protest?'I said to him, 'It's my civic duty.'And he said, 'Ha! You're being paid by the government.'"

Occasionally, there's a faint signal that the protesters' message is getting through.

The day before the gathering at the consulate, Benoit said she was standing in front of the Russian Embassy holding a sign reading"Be brave like your Russian protesters," when she caught the eye of a man behind the fence.

Russia had just announced plans to conscript300,000 fresh troops, sparking anti-mobilization protests in cities across thatcountry. Hundredsof protesters have been arrested.

The manlooked at Benoit's sign and subtly nodded his head.

"It seemed like he had some heart," she said.

A woman with a Ukrainian flag.
'We get so much more out of this than we put in. It is no problem to be out here,' said protester Niven-Wigston. (Alistair Steele/CBC)

Protests are 'very meaningful'

Kalytasaid she recognizes the difficult situation embassy staff are in.

"The Russian regime is really scary, and I don't know what that's like, I've never lived in that," she said."[But] I definitely feel like Russians need to be standing up. More of them need to be standing up. Come on, it's time."

OrestZakydalsky, a senior policy adviser with the Ukrainian Canadian Congress who's gottento know the regular protesters over the past few months, and whose name was also added to Russia's sanctions list last week, believes the group, though small, is making a tremendous difference.

"This is one of the most important things we can do, is keep the war top of mind and in the press so people don't forget that in the middle of Europe there's Russian rockets and artillery shells slamming into civilian buildings and hospitals every day," he said. "It's very meaningful."

As for the Russians working for their government here in Canada,Zakydalskyurged them to consider their own future.

"I think that the people inside the buildings have a chance to think about who they work for and the kind of world they want to leave to their kids, and what they want to tell their grandchildren," he said.