Posted on 02/08/2022 7:19:14 AM PST by billorites
As the anti-pandemic rule protest in Ottawa continues into its second week, many residents in the downtown core say they have been living a nightmare, constantly under siege and with many terrified to leave their homes — except to seek refuge elsewhere.
Residents described being bombarded by relentless honking, fireworks, being choked by diesel fumes, seeing hate symbols openly displayed, subjected to racial, homophobic and transphobic slurs, attacked for wearing masks, and feeling let down by all levels of government and police since the first vehicles set up Jan. 28.
While there may be some reprieve to the horns after a judge granted a 10-day interim injunction Monday, many residents point out that won't put an end to the multitude of other worries they're facing.
"Being a woman of colour, I felt very fearful," said Arushana, who left her home in the ByWard Market to stay with a colleague in the Glebe last weekend. CBC is not using her last name because she is concerned for her safety.
After putting up with sleepless nights and fireworks being aimed at her building, one of the final straws was seeing a Confederate flag on her way home from work.
"I broke down," she said. "As a first generation immigrant child, seeing such hatred, especially when my parents came to this country to provide me and my sister with a better opportunity and a better life .... I didn't feel safe."
Kevin Nielsen described feeling "a general sense of terror," living within blocks of Parliament Hill and felt intimidated every time he left his building. He left his home on Thursday to stay with friends elsewhere in the city.
"I was constantly on high alert," he said. "It had a large impact on my mental health."
He said he witnessed others being subjected to homophobic slurs, while also facing them himself through social media.
Somerset Coun. Catherine McKenney, whose ward encompasses much of the affected area has received hundreds of emails from residents "who just are at their wit's end."
"They were unable to sleep. They felt helpless. Many people who have been in touch with me have moved out of their homes," McKenney said told CBC. "But we also have people living downtown or living in social housing, and we have seniors who have not been able to leave."
'It's been hell, to put it bluntly,' said Richard Troy Baker, an Ottawa resident who teaches online cooking courses, about how the protests in downtown Ottawa have affected his life and his ability to feel safe outside his home. Baker has ataxia and uses a wheelchair.
CBC also heard dozens of similar stories from people.
'I am a Jewish woman … On top of the deafening honking and stench of diesel, seeing the rampant anti-Semitism and the harassment of women for wearing masks was incredibly distressing," one person wrote in an email.
Yet another wrote she was confronted on her way to the grocery store. "I was shoved, screamed at, called [sexist and homophobic slurs], and had three large men try to pen me in and physically block my way, because I was wearing a mask."
One woman said that even though she doesn't live downtown, she's still fearful.
"I am a brown woman and I am also incredibly scared of the occupiers. It infuriates me that people seem to be more upset about the war memorial than Nazi flags, Confederate flags and Trump flags being brandished about," she wrote.
"I have lived in Ottawa my whole life and … this is the first time in my life that I don't feel safe enough to [walk around]."
Residents feel abandoned
Many of the people who have left said they recognized they were privileged to have a quieter place to go. But one person wrote about how even fleeing didn't mean truly escaping.
"What may be the most difficult aspect [is that] most of my family supports the protest. It is heartbreaking that as I am going through this trauma, I have family trying to defend the protest to me," she wrote. "This is a siege, not a protest and it is non-stop harassment."
One persistent theme among the emails and people CBC spoke with was they feel let down by government and Ottawa police.
As one person wrote, "All levels of government failed the citizens downtown."
You are fake news! -- Donald John Trump
(JMO regarding this CBC article)
Not just whining, lying.
“Fear of violence outside”
Lemme know when businesses start to catch fire.
So, now they know exactly what the hundreds of communities went through in 2020 during the St. George BLM terrorist and antifa rallies, which they probably supported.
It sounds like Kimberly is ovulating. Journalism is dead.
more CBC propaganda, designed to paint the truckers as terrorists
yet the CBC was celebrating the BLM thugs 2 years ago when they were looting, burning, and destroying
CBC = Canadian Pravda! Defund these bastards now!!
How likely this is even true?
I wonder if all these scared little rabbits understand that truckers doing their jobs is what enabled them to live in downtown Ottawa in the first place? Probably not.
“it is non-stop harassment.”
THATS RIGHT AND SO ARE THE MANDATES....HOW’S IT FEEL!!!
I think Justin Castro’s speech writer composed that and handed it to his Gov PR arm...the CNS.
But one person wrote about how even fleeing didn’t mean truly escaping.
“What may be the most difficult aspect [is that] most of my family supports the protest.
I don’t know why I should have expected anything but propaganda out of the CBC... but I will say, they surely didn’t disappoint. This exceeds even my Goebbels-level expectations for CBC media.
Fake news indeed.
Black LIES Matter.
The CBC is as fake as CNN.
Real life “Trailer Park Boys” going on.
Liars.
People have been conditioned to feel fearful over honking horns. Make up accusations of racism. Sad commentary.
I doubt they have been triple vaxed, just a hunch.
Dunno what she saw for sure -- if she even exists -- but all I'm seeing in the pictures are trucks, Canadian flags and some signs.
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