03. WINNIPEG'S
"KEYSTONE KOPS"
(The
following article is from
the April 1-15,
2008
issue of People's Voice, Canada's leading communist newspaper. Articles
can be reprinted free if the source is credited. Subscription rates in
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ON, L8P 2H3).
PV Manitoba bureau
WINNIPEG - "Hole-eee sh%@!" were the
words that escaped from Judy Wasylycia-Leis' lips as the police cars
and paddy wagon cut across Main Street towards the crowd, sirens
wailing, engines revving, lights flashing. Standing beside her, I could
see that the Winnipeg North NDP Member of Parliament was incredulous at
how crazy the situation had become.
An hour
earlier on March 15, a
peaceful rally calling for the withdrawal of Canadian troops took place
in front of the Canadian Grain Commission building. Largely silent, we
marched in a circle on the sidewalk with signs and banners. Passing
cars, transit buses, and semi-truck air horns honked and blasted in
agreement with our modest but resolute picket.
A few
speakers noted the
significance of the event: the fifth anniversary of the opening of the
Iraq theatre of the on-going war. Another point raised is that
Canadians must realize that the Afghanistan theatre is part of the same
war, not a separate war as the government spin doctors claim. Calls to
defeat Harper were made, and speakers expressed anger that the
opposition Liberals do anything but oppose the Tories.
Across the
street, a number of
unmarked vans and cars took photographs of all the demonstrators.
Indignant, the crowd moved en masse at the next crossing signal and
openly questioned the city police about their actions. Wasylycia-Leis,
among others, grilled the officers, who remained in the vehicles.
The rally
was about to disperse
when a private security guard dressed in a shirt, tie and blazer came
out. In an angry and raised voice, he shouted "this is private
property!" and "you are loitering."
A couple of
meters away stood a
bus stop. Shouts of "how can we be loitering?... why are the police
here taking our pictures?... Aren't they loitering?" came from the now
irritated crowd.
The security
guard responded
that he could let the police on the property and chose to do so. He
continued to provoke the assembly, and then came the paddy wagon.
People were getting instinctively afraid and angry. This had clearly
become a farce.
It is
fitting that this all took
place in the Keystone province, on the Ides of March and the Day
against Police Brutality. It is a bitter irony that in the war to bring
"democracy and freedom" abroad, we felt like we were on the way to a
totalitarian state.
I asked Judy
Wasylycia-Leis what
the police answered about why they were spying on us. "(They told me)
they were doing it to protect us... they do this (surveillance) at
every demonstration," she said, not impressed at the answer the cops
gave her.
(According
to the book Police
Crowd Control, by Capt. Charles Beene, the police take pictures for
evidence when they prosecute a protester in court. No mention about
protection).
Another
protester exclaimed at
the fast police response time and complained to an officer about slow
response to violent crimes in the North End (in reference to the 500
missing women in Canada). The police commanded photographers not to
take photos. "How come you can take our pictures?!" a woman protested.
We resumed
dispersing. A police
officer went into the Winnipeg Commodity Exchange next door. By
observing the state's response to the protest, I felt that we were
doing the right thing. The powers that be see peace activists as
dangerous enough to keep watch over. The Tory government in Ottawa and
big business City Hall, what a bunch of control freaks!