Bill Blair turns back the clock to before Charter
LEGAL LIMITS / Police have crossed a line by arresting peaceful protestors at Toronto G20
Gareth Kirkby / National / Tuesday, June 29, 2010
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Toronto police last weekend lost track of what their job is and whom they work for, and in the process introduced a new wrinkle in human-rights violations.

Of course, as so many sad things do these days, it all started with Stephen Harper.

Our global star of a PM set off a stink bomb of his own at the G8 summit when he ignored pleas from city politicians to hold the international economic gabfest at the Canadian National Exhibition grounds. The CNE is tucked away near the lakefront, away from vulnerable stores and small businesses and is home to a convention centre that could host the talks. And it is surrounded by fences, a perfect place to avoid 'collateral damage' in the inevitable protest wars that accompany the world's most elite circus.

But Harper insisted on a meeting in the downtown core, surrounded by stores, homes and canyoned streets. How could he be unaware of the history of the small pack of G8 groupies who can't bear to miss a chance to smash windows or throw bricks — and lack the humour or intellectual rigour to instead make signs or come up with snappy slogans to sing or chant?

Harper spent more than a billion dollars (money that could have gone instead to arts funding, restoring the Court Challenges Program, even his beloved maternity health program) to import thousands of cops from across Canada. All so he could strut with his new best friends from China and Britain. Those cops were focussed on protecting Harper's pals by keeping people far away from his waterfront playground; so intently focussed that they didn't have officers keeping peace on the streets nearby as 21st century bandits without brains smashed the windows of coffee shops.

More than 10,000 cops protected the prime minister while shopkeepers saw their small profits crash in shards of glass.

And then it got even worse as more cops were brought into the core and zeroed in on the wrong target: peaceful protesters. In multiple locations, but starting Saturday afternoon at the commons around Queen's Park legislature (a longstanding space for protests big and small) police surrounded citizens exercising their right to protest (and some who were just passing through), gassed, strong-armed and arrested them.

By Sunday, the technique was in full flight. And the police had invented a serious new wrinkle in human-rights violations. Journalists were arrested for doing their jobs and politically involved citizens were arrested while speaking out against things like the lack of action on global warming. News reports clearly showed police systematically arresting innocent people.

(Flickr, CC 2.0, PastePie / Paste Berlusconi)


And the mayor praised the police chief for it. For his part, chief Bill Blair claimed on CBC Monday morning, that because some vandals were hiding among legitimate protesters, the police had the right to first corrall people, and then make mass arrests — some 900 before the weekend was out.

The peaceful protesters, said Blair, were "arrested for breach of the peace because through their actions they were creating the opportunity for these criminals to attack our city." In other words, he was holding responsible the environmental demonstrators, labour demonstrators, people protesting China's oppression of Tibet, anti-globalization protesters, and global-warming activists for the fact that vandals were hiding amongst them.

Blair acknowledges that these people, who included many gays and lesbians, had no connection to the vandals (he calls the vandals a 'criminal conspiracy') but claims that by their presence and by their actions — by which he presumably means that by failing to make citizen's arrests — they were "fully complicit."

That's not only absurd, it's dangerous. It's anti-democratic and contrary to much that is great about our nation. In Canada, we have a right to freedom of speech, freedom of expression and freedom of assembly. We have a right to demonstrate against G8 conferences — and we have a right to protest against anti-G8 protesters.

In the gay community, we've had some vigorous demonstrations, most notable those against the bathhouse raids of the 1980s in Toronto. The righteous rage of those demonstrators included throwing themselves against the huge wooden doors of the Ontario legislature. The Toronto Pride Parade evolved directly from those raids and the anger of the city's gays and lesbians. Our parades have been political, sometimes vigorously so. We have a clear interest in making sure that the police know that their job is to respect our Charter and whom they work for.

So, let's be clear: It is the job of the police, not the large number of legitimate protesters, to arrest the small number of vandals. It is the job of the police to know the difference between vigorous protest and actual crime. It is the job of the police to protect the rights of protest that are guaranteed in our Charter.

In short, the police don't want to hear it but they work for the protesters, all of us, and not just Stephen Harper.


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Reader Comments


 
BILL BLAIR AT 519
FYI Toronto Police Board and Chief’s Pride Reception@ The 519 Church Street Community Centre 4:30
JM, Toronto Ontario
06/29/10 1:43 PM EST
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Blair available tonight at Cop Pride reception
Tonight is the annual Chief's Gay Pride reception with the Police Services Board. (7pm at 519 comm centre) One can tell Bill Blair directly what we thought of their poor & dangerous policing most of this weekend. (BTW Blair does know it his his duty & job as police to protect (and not attack)legitimate demonstrators as they did last eve and Saturday during the main march.) I for one am going to ask him some hard questions this eve if I get the chance.
james dubro, toronto Ontario
06/29/10 1:44 PM EST
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430/5pm tonight new time of Blair Pride reception
Blair reception may be 430/5pm--6 or 7 tonight and not starting at 7 as per correction that just came in. check with 519 desk as they are being a bit elusive.
james dubro, toronto ontaro
06/29/10 1:52 PM EST
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Really Peaceful what a Joke
They damage property and burned Police Cars and it was Peaceful?
Peter From, Toronto ON
06/29/10 3:33 PM EST
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Peter
Yes, Peter, the protests that the police violently broke up were peaceful. The incidents where people burned cars and broke windows, by contrast, were permitted to go on unimpeded. Curious, that.
Matt, Verdun QC
06/29/10 6:37 PM EST
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WTF
Total loss of personal accountability. How unbelievably self-entailed so called activism has become. Yeah it's the police's fault for not stopping the bad guys fast enough to preserve MY rights!!! What a load of shit. And by the way if you see a crime being committed and do nothing to stop it, i.e.. not calling the police or not co-operating with them when they are trying to find out who did it, You are just as guilty. How about this, "It's the job of the protesters not to obstruct traffic, It's job of the protesters to co-operate with police, it's the job of the protesters to report criminal behavior when they see it."
Mike, Barie Ontario
06/29/10 7:19 PM EST
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WTF-WTF
Mike from "Barie" said "It's the job of the protesters not to obstruct traffic, It's job of the protesters to co-operate with police, it's the job of the protesters to report criminal behavior when they see it". That might be fine for a Soviet-style country, but you might have noticed that Canada claims to be a democracy.
Randy, Windsor ON
06/29/10 11:53 PM EST
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Rights
One day something really important is going to happen, and we will all have been convinced that we aren't allowed to protest it, or that doing so would somehow be wrong. Thanks for all the citizens who braved the conditions to stand up for my right to disagree. P.S. Not supporting the rights of peaceful protestors should make you ineligible to comment (ie protest or agree with the author) After all, you're allowed to have your say
Alex M, Toronto Ontario
06/30/10 1:23 AM EST
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Left something out
You forgot the part where the "peaceful" protesters were flipping over cop cars, smashing store windows, and all that fun stuff. Just saying. Also, http://news.nationalpost.com/2010/06/29/police-given-no-special-powers-during-g20-province/
Kanivanan, Pyongyang NK
06/30/10 12:12 PM EST
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Columnist replies
Thank you everybody who took the time to comment, whatever your point of view. It seems to me that there's confusion over the various kinds of people on the streets during the G20. The huge, huge majority of the many thousands of people who protested over the weekend were peaceful people who cared about things like the Chinese oppression of Tibet, the gap between 'developed' nations and 'undeveloped' nations, the increasing gap between the rich and poor in western nations, the fact that the G8 & G20 failed to put global warming on the agenda, and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. They were peaceful, they sang, they held protest songs, etc. Then a much, much smaller group of people employed black block tactics and trashed shops and so on. But the police mainly arrested peaceful protestors (perhaps your grandmother or the gay guy next door was among them?) and left alone the vandals. Certainly, that's what almost all reporters observed and what most Canadian media reported. Is it appropriate to ignore the vandals and concentrate police efforts on arresting the peaceful activists and hold them in deplorable cell conditions? That's what people are upset about. We have a Charter of Rights and Freedoms to stop exactly this sort of thing from happening.
Gareth Kirkby, Vancouver BC
06/30/10 8:02 PM EST
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Shame
All: Don't forget, those who incited or participated in violence included undercover police officers acting as agents provocateurs, a common tactic. And don't forget that the police intentionally allowed the violence spree to continue unchecked to allow for photo ops and provide justification for their own dubious actions and pricetag, snatching sun-shielding parasols from 80-year-old women as alleged "weapons" while letting their own cars symbolically burn.
Shawn Syms, Toronto ON
07/01/10 7:20 AM EST
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