“Several criminal investigations are underway in relation to the desecration of the National War Memorial/Terry Fox statute, threatening/illegal/intimidating behavior to police/city workers and other individuals and damage to a city vehicle,” the Ottawa Police Service tweeted Sunday.
This weekend’s protests grew out of the “Freedom Convoy” that made its way through Canada for several days before arriving in Ottawa on Saturday. It began as a protest by truckers opposed to vaccine requirements, before gaining followers calling for an end to other Covid-19 mandates as well.
Ottawa police were working with protest organizers Sunday evening “to facilitate the safe departure” of people and vehicles from the downtown core where protests were focused.
Police avoided ticketing and towing vehicles “so as not to instigate confrontations with demonstrators,” but confrontations and the need for de-escalation has regularly occurred between police and demonstrators, according to the statement.
The agency estimated the financial costs of policing around the demonstrations was more than $800,000 a day.
On Saturday, the protests were generally peaceful, police said — but noisy. The sound of horns honking was heard throughout the capital, though many demonstrators were concentrated in the downtown core, causing traffic in and around Parliament Hill and prompting city officials to ask residents to avoid the area due to gridlock.
And while temperatures reached only 8 degrees Fahrenheit, the cold did not stop crowds from joining the convoy on foot or greeting them with Canadian flags on bridges and highway overpasses.
No arrests were reported by the Ottawa Police Service on Saturday and overnight. But there were incidents that prompted condemnation by officials such as Canada’s chief of defense, Gen. Wayne Eyre, who said he was “sickened to see protesters dance on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and desecrate the National War Memorial.”
“Generations of Canadians have fought and died for our rights, including free speech, but not this,” Eyre tweeted Saturday. “Those involved should hang their heads in shame.”
“The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and the National War Memorial are sacred sites for Canadians. The desecration of these sites was a disgusting act and is a dishonour to those soldiers who have given their lives for our country and those Canadian soldiers who continue to fight for our freedom today,” the CTA said in a statement.
It went on to call Terry Fox, the late athlete and cancer research activist, a “national hero.” The defacing of Fox’s monument was another insult to “the memory of one of the greatest Canadians in our history,” the federation said.
Trucks and cars still lined the streets in Ottawa’s downtown core Sunday morning, and again, protesters showed no signs of leaving despite a frostbite warning with temperatures as low as -4 degrees Fahrenheit.
Ottawa police promised a “very large police presence” Sunday and said national monuments would be fortified and protected. Barricades were installed to “block any vehicular access to the path in front of the National War Memorial.”
“The OPS and our partners continue to focus on keeping the peace in and around the demonstrations and maintaining emergency access lanes while addressing any threatening high-risk behaviour,” Ottawa police said in a statement Sunday morning.
People who work in Ottawa’s downtown core are advised to work remotely Monday and parents should check if schools in the area will be open, police said Sunday night.
CNN’s Paula Newton reported from Ottawa, and Dakin Andone and Keith Allen reported and wrote in Atlanta. CNN’s Chris Boyette and Artemis Moshtaghian contributed to this report.