Canada: Angry truck drivers block busiest passage to US

Angry Canadian truck drivers are blocking the busiest passage to the United States today, as Prime Minister Justin Trinto prepares to meet in Parliament later today to discuss the escalating crisis.

The drivers, who are calling for an end to the COVID-19 vaccination measure for professionals crossing the Canadian-US border, first arrived in Ottawa on January 28 and gradually occupied the center of the Canadian capital.

As police gradually regained control, protesters – many of whom are demanding Trinto’s resignation – turned their attention to the Ambassador Bridge, which connects Detroit to Windsor.

Truck drivers began blocking traffic late yesterday (local time) and a Canadian government website indicated that the bridge was closed in both directions at 7:11 a.m. (local time, 14.07 Greek time).

Canada ships 75% of its exports to the United States, and trucks play a critical role in these shipments. About 8,000 trucks pass through this bridge per day, which reflects the economic importance of this block.

“They sent us here to give a message and the message is not going away,” Tom Maratzo, a spokesman for the protesters in Ottawa, told reporters late yesterday.

Trinto, who has been in solitary confinement for 10 days after being infected with COVID-19, is expected to return to the House of Commons to meet with lawmakers urging him to work harder to end what a councilor called a “national humiliation”. “.

His government, however, says police forces are expected to be able to restore order.

“Individuals are trying to disrupt our economy, our democracy and the daily lives of our fellow citizens. This must stop,” Trinto said in an emergency debate in the House of Commons last night.

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson, facing growing public outrage, wants to be named mediator, but ministers have said there is no chance of success.

Source: AMPE

Source: Capital

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