Toronto G20 rally calls for public inquiry - Action News
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Toronto

Toronto G20 rally calls for public inquiry

More than 2,000 people march in Toronto to demand an independent inquiry into police actions during the G20 summit.

'Mass arrests are unacceptable'

The rally leaves Queen's Park to march through downtown Toronto on Saturday. Demonstrators from a variety of organizations and causes called for a public inquiry into police action during the recent G20 summit. ((Showwei Chu/CBC))

More than 2,000 people marched Saturday afternoon in Toronto to demand an independent inquiry into police actions during last month's G20 summit.

Organized by labour, community and student groups, the rallyheaded south from Queen's Park, site of the Ontario legislature, through downtown to the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, where the summit took place June 26 and 27.

"What do we want? Public inquiry! When do we want it? Now!" the demonstrators chanted as they filed into a park across from the convention centre.

Others held aloft placardsdenouncingviolations of civil libertiesduring thesummit, with onesign declaring"Police attackcharter,"while another called on Toronto police Chief Bill Blair to resign.

"There are many unanswered questions," Hamid Osman of the Canadian Federation of Students bellowedas he addressedthe assembled crowd."Who was directing police to take away our civil liberties on June 26 and 27?"

Nearly 1,000 people were detained before and during the G20, hundreds of them at peaceful sit-ins,as part ofthe largest peacetime mass arrest in Canadian history. Others, including about 50 Quebec protesters billeted at a University of Toronto student building, were rounded up in police raids on homes and buildings.

Police also nabbed innocent bystanders, journalists and even aTTCdriver headed to work.

"Mass arrests are unacceptable, they are illegal and unconstitutional, so why did we have them?" said Nathalie Des Rosiers, general counsel for the Canadian Civil Liberties Association. "I think it's about fair that people know what happened,what went wrong."

Toronto theatre directorand playwright Tommy Taylor was arrestedon thenight ofJune 26 when he and two friends none of whom was protesting got caught in a mass roundup outside a downtown hotel. His 10,000-word recollection of that weekendgenerated thousands of consolatorymessages onFacebook, he told the crowd at Saturday's rally.

"I spent 24 hours in a cage with 40 men," Taylor said. "I was not a protester that weekend. I was snatched up, an average Canadian dude. Now I'm a protester."

Complaints pile up

The Toronto Police Service's civilian oversight board and Ontario's Office of the Independent Police Review Director have been swamped with complaints in the wake of the G20.

Lulu Harper, who was arrested and held for 13 hours on June 27, attended Saturday's march with her mother and a friend holding a homemade sign with the message, 'This is democracy.' The 17-year-old said her mother had to file a missing person's report to learn of her fate. ((Showwei Chu/CBC) )

Hundreds of people havereported arbitrary arrests and detentions, police brutality, random searches of bags in areas kilometres away from the summit security zone,seizures of innocuous items like goggles and clothing, and inhumane conditions in the temporary jail used to detain protesters.

Blair said his force's response was reasonable because a small group among the G20 protesters broke off from the main demonstrations to smash store windows and commit other vandalism. The force says it will conduct its own internalprobe of G20 policing, while the Toronto Police Services Board has also pledged areview.

"It's not enough. There are too many questions about the different levels of government involved," said Shanaaz Gokool, chair of Amnesty International's Toronto branch.

Amnesty and the other organizers of Saturday's rally including the Ontario Federation of Labour, the Canadian Civil Liberties Associationand the Ontario branch of the Canadian Union of Public Employees are calling for a full public inquiry.

Same-day marcheswere planned for Halifax, Montreal and Windsor, Ont.

Of the more than 1,000 people arrested during the G20, about 800 were released without charge, while a dozen are still in jail awaiting bail hearings.