Tag Archives: caribbean

US House of Reps. Passes Debt Relief Bill for Caribbean Nations

A bill to support debt relief for Caribbean and other developing countries has passed in the US House of Representatives.

Congresswoman and activist legislator in New York Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who represents New York’s 14th Congressional District, says the measure was passed in the House on Friday as part of the America COMPETES Act.

“The legislation strengthens the G-20’s (Group of 20) Common Framework, a multilateral debt relief initiative, to reflect the challenges countries have faced during the pandemic,” said Ocasio-Cortez, whose district includes the eastern part of the Bronx, portions of north-central Queens and Rikers Island in New York City.

“Critically, the legislation also places a moratorium on debt payments for countries that are applying to be part of the Common Framework,” she added. “Developing nations whose early economies and political systems were crippled by colonialism and foreign intervention deserve a real opportunity to compete – to build independent, sustainable economies, unburdened by impossible levels of debt.”

The congresswoman said the legislation will also have benefits at home as well as overseas.

“The race-to-the-bottom for wages that has cost the US so many manufacturing jobs is driven by the economic vulnerability of developing nations,” said Ocasio-Cortez, who drew national recognition when she won the Democratic Party’s primary election for New York’s 14th congressional district on June 26, 2018.

“We can’t have a healthy, competitive global economy, as long as the whims of a handful of nations dictate the financial stability of the rest of the world,” said Ocasio-Cortez, who along with Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib are the first female members of the Democratic Socialists of America elected to serve in the US Congress.

The World Bank has warned of a significant 12 per cent increase in the debt burden of developing countries to a record US$860 billion in view of the  COVID-19 pandemic, called for expeditious efforts to reduce debt levels.

“COVID-19 has dealt a major blow to world’s poorest countries, causing a recession that could push more than 100 million people into extreme poverty,” said the Washington-based financial institution in a statement last December. “That is why the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund urged G20 countries to establish the Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI).

The World Bank said the DSSI is helping countries concentrate their resources on fighting the pandemic and safeguarding the lives and livelihoods of millions of the most vulnerable people.

Since it took effect on May 1, 2020, the bank said the initiative has delivered more than US$10.3 billion in relief to more than 40 eligible countries.

Among other things, Ocasio-Cortez advocates for abolishing the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the agency responsible for rounding up and deporting undocumented Caribbean and other immigrants.

CMC/

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Jamaica: PM’s Drive to Get Illegal Guns Out of Circulation

By Patrick Green

CNW

jamaica pm andrew holness

With the crime rate spiraling out of control for the new year, the Jamaican government is embarking on an ambitious “Get Every Illegal Gun” campaign to curtail the work of criminals.  So far this year, the island has recorded 112 murders, while 1463 Jamaicans were killed last year.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness announced on Friday that the government would pay as much as US$4,000 in local currency to persons who provide information leading to the seizure of illegal guns and the arrest of wanted criminals.  The campaign seems to be targeting persons with illegal firearms and those with information about the weapons.

“Today, I’m appealing to persons who are in possession of illegal weapons to give them up. Give up your illegal weapons using any one of the information channels that are available. We have Crime Stop that you just need to dial 311, you have the JDF (Jamaica Defence Force) tipline or just dial 119. Tell us what you know about the guns,” he said.

Program tried before

This is the boldest and most by the government to tackle its crime monster apart from creating the Zone of Special Operations (ZOSO) since 2017.  That year, the government had a similar program that provided Ja$100 million to get illegal guns and ammunition off the streets.  At that time, the administration paid Ja$150,000 for a semi-automatic, Ja$100,000 for shotguns, revolvers Ja$75,000, and negotiable payments for ammo.

According to the New York Times, the Jamaican authorities estimated that 200 illegal guns are smuggled into the country each month from the United States.  The report stated that the legal firearms in Jamaica amounted to fewer than 45,000.   The number of killings by firearm worldwide is almost fifty percent, according to igarape.org.   In Latin America and the Caribbean, the figure jumps to 66 percent.  But killing by guns in Jamaica is higher than 80 percent, stated the New York Times report.

Illegal guns from the USA

In 2009 NBC News reported that 80 percent of the illegal guns in Jamaica come from the United States.  The report quoted Leslie Green, then assistant commissioner of police, saying: “There aren’t any checks or any controls on goods leaving the United States. Yet anything leaving here, we have to make sure it’s double-checked and tripled-checked for drugs.”

Gun buy-back programs around the world

Gun buy-back programs have been tried in other parts of the world, including Argentina, Australia, Brazil, New Zealand, and the United States.  According to a Gleaner report, New Zealand took back 50,000 guns in 2019 in exchange for US$66 million.  Brooklyn in New York City took in 659 guns in 1999.  Under Michael Bloomberg’s mayorship, New York City offered US100.00 and amnesty for guns in 2002.  More than 1,400 guns were turned in between May and August that year.  Then in 2008, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly spent $1 million to get 5,000 guns off the streets.

In Miramar, Florida, a gun buy-back program spearheaded by Commissioner Alexandra Davis offers gift cards of up to $150.00 for various types of guns.

However, the difference between those countries and the Jamaica initiative is gun ownership.  Most of the guns returned in other countries are from legal gun owners.  The million-dollar question is whether illegal firearm owners will be willing to turn in their weapons or if enough people will be bold enough to turn in the criminals.  Not much information is available on Jamaica’s 2017 initiative results.

Earlier this week, the government announced plans for launching the new incentive-based campaign.  The National Crime Prevention Fund (NCPF), which operates Crime Stop, already pays out for tips. Still, last week, the National Security Council (NSC) agreed on the development of another robust national campaign against illegal guns and gangs.

Young men will be the key demographic target of the campaign, which stakeholders say aims to educate the population on the dangers of illegal guns and dissuade persons from dealing, trafficking, procuring, possessing, and using such weapons.

“There will be a significant public-education component on the new Firearms Act and the penalties that will be applied to persons involved with illegal weapons,” according to a statement issued by the Office of the Prime Minister.

In 2019, Crime Stop received 1,020 tips and 679 in 2020, which resulted in total payments of J$14 million.

13 guns seized in Trelawny

The announcement by Holness comes less than 24 hours after law enforcement authorities seized 13 guns, including ten high-powered rifles, during an operation in Trelawny.

The police say two sub-machine guns and a pistol were also found and that a man, identified as Kevin Carpenter, was killed during the operations.

Investigators say he was a member of a criminal network and that a woman and two children were not harmed in the house where he was staying.  Carpenter was being sought for questioning in connection with gun-running and shootings.

Assistant Commissioner Clifford Chambers, head of Area One Police Headquarters, said Carpenter was the relative of a gang leader who was charged with murder in Westmoreland.

“[The gang leader] was granted bail with the condition that he remain out of Westmoreland division, except on court days. And the address given as his condition of bail is the home address of the deceased in the fatal shooting this morning,” ACP Chambers told Radio Jamaica.

Police Commissioner Major General Antony Anderson said Thursday’s operations were part of an island-wide clampdown on “guns, gunmen, and gangs.

“Gunmen are moving uptown. They have acquired wealth and are living in gated communities. This is why it is important for persons, even in upscale communities, who see strange activities or persons to provide information to the police. Even with our improving intelligence capabilities, we need your help to find them,” he said.

On Monday, Anderson said that since the start of the year, 88 illegal guns had been recovered, including 13 rifles, the highest haul in January since 2011.  He also indicated that the AK-47 is the weapon of choice for gunmen in Jamaica.  This gun cost between J$500,000 and one million dollars to acquire.

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Haiti: 36-Hour Torrential Rains Cause Severe Flooding, Hundreds Displaced

(CNW) Port-au-Prince, February 3, 2022. – Major flooding due to heavy rainfall in the North-Western and North-Eastern municipalities of Haiti has resulted in at least six deaths and one missing person. The island’s Civil Protection Agency shared this latest report on Monday, January 31, 2022.

The agency continued to report that nearly 36 hours of rain caused flooding, primarily in the north of the Caribbean country, with water filling the historic center of Cap-Haitien and heavy winds downing trees.

“Residents of areas that are prone to flooding and exposed to wind (should) take the necessary precautions to protect themselves,” the agency had written in a statement while recommending that, “Above all, (citizens should) not cross flooded rivers under any circumstances.” The flooding has already had a devastating impact on over 2500 households across 22 municipalities.

On February 2, 2022, a delegation that included the Director-General of Civil Protection, Dr. Jerry Chandler, and the Minister of the Interior and Territorial Collectivities, Mr. Liszt Quitel, met with officials of the main municipalities in Cap-Haitien to discuss relief efforts.

The result of this meeting proved fruitful as several national and international partners were deployed by midday of the same day with a convoy of necessities for the over 500 displaced families in a temporary shelter in the north coastal city of Fort Liberte.

Director-General Chandler took the opportunity to publicly ask communities members exposed to the risk of flooding to take the necessary measures to protect themselves. In the meantime, the agency will continue to monitor the weather situation to keep the population informed and remind them of the precautionary instructions.

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T&T Coast Guard Fires at Venezuelan Immigrant Boat, Kills Baby, Wounds Mother

CARACAS, Venezuela — Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard officers fired at a boat carrying Venezuelan migrants Saturday night, wounding a mother and killing the baby in her arms, authorities said Sunday.

The fatal shooting took place as officers tried to stop a boat crossing the Venezuelan border into Trinidad and Tobago, in what the island nation’s officials described as an act of self-defense, according to a Coast Guard statement.

Venezuelan human rights lawyers and opposition officials condemned the shooting and demanded an investigation.

“The death of a Venezuelan boy, who along with his mother fled from the dictatorship, hurts our soul as a country,” tweeted Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó. “The shots fired by the Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard are unjustified, they killed him.”

The Coast Guard spotted the boat as it crossed the Venezuelan border into Trinidad and Tobago waters just before midnight Saturday, according to a statement posted on Facebook and signed by Kerron Valere, a lieutenant and public affairs officer with the Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard.

The Coast Guard crew tried to intercept the boat using its horn, searchlight and flares, followed by warning gun shots, according to the statement, but the boat continued forward with “aggressive” moves, attempting to ram into a Coast Guard vessel.

The vessel was larger than the Coast Guard boat, the statement said, and its advances caused crew members “to fear for their lives,” prompting them to fire shots at the vessel’s engine, according to the Coast Guard statement, which did not specify how many shots were fired. Officials said the recent use of this “evasive technique” against the Coast Guard in other instances had caused ship damage and risked the safety of crew members.

Only after the ship stopped did the Coast Guard realize there were migrants “hidden” on board, and a woman was bleeding, according to the statement. The woman was stabilized and taken to a local health facility, but her baby was found unresponsive. Officials did not specify how many people were on the vessel but said the others on board will be processed “in accordance with immigration and health protocols.”

“The Trinidad and Tobago Coast Guard extends sincerest condolences to the family and loved ones of the infant and takes the opportunity to wish the injured female a speedy recovery,” the statement read.

The wounded mother told her relatives that the captain of the boat wanted to turn back to Venezuela when he saw the Coast Guard, the woman’s sister-in-law, Daicelis Salgado, 38, said in an interview with The Washington Post.

“But the Guard followed them and started shooting at the engines,” Salgado said. “She was close to the engine. She said she felt something hit her in the chest and immediately looked down and saw the baby’s head broken. She had him in her chest when she was shot.”

The baby, his mother and his sister were all on their way to meet the children’s father, who had been living in Trinidad, Salgado said. She said authorities have not yet informed the father or other family members of the whereabouts of the older child or the body of the baby boy.

“My brother doesn’t know where his daughter is,” she said.

Salgado left for Trinidad four years ago from her hometown in Venezuela, fleeing the economic crisis there. Her brother followed eight months ago. She learned the rest of his family was traveling to Trinidad this Saturday.

“I told him I didn’t agree because things are not very good here now,” she said. “But he told me he rented a room and bought a fan for his children. He wanted them all to be together.”

They were among 20 people on board the migrant boat on Saturday night, said Orlando Moreno, a lawyer with the Venezuelan advocacy group Foro Penal. He heard about the death from a family member of the baby boy in Trinidad on Sunday.

“What kind of people are they to shoot like that? What consolation can a mother have after that?” Moreno said in a tweet, adding that he has put the relatives in contact with United Nations representatives in Venezuela. “This is the reality of our coasts. It is a permanent tragedy with faces, stories, families and pain.”

Between six to 10 vessels leave daily from northeastern Venezuela toward Trinidad and Tobago, Moreno said, as Venezuelans continue to flee the economic crisis in the socialist state under the government of President Nicolás Maduro. The president did not make any public statements about the shooting by late Sunday.

The fatal shooting comes as Venezuelans are crossing into the United States in record numbers, usually after flying to Mexico and walking across the border. U.S. Customs and Border Protection stopped 24,819 Venezuelans in December, up from 206 a year earlier.

Nafeesa Mohammed, a human rights attorney in Trinidad, said she was concerned about the shooting and described it as an “abnormal situation” with more questions than answers.

“It is a very barbaric approach,” she said. “You should not be firing at a vessel in the middle of the night unless they are being attacked. … Was there evidence of an attack? Who can prove it?”

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WORLD VIEW: Macron Visits Putin Over Ukraine, Winter Olympic Surprizes, Ivanka Trump Wanted by Congress, More

Feb. 7, 2022

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  • French President Emmanuel Macron is set to hold talks in Moscow in a bid to to help de-escalate the tense situation around Ukraine.
  • There is lots of news from the Olympics in Beijing including Chinese tennis player Peng Shuai saying that her allegation of sexual assault by a top official was a “big misunderstanding” in an interview that appeared controlled.
  • U.S. skier Mikaela Shiffrin quickly bombed out in the defense of her 2018 gold medal in the giant slalom event.
  • In politics, the U.S. congressional committee investigating events on Jan. 6 is awaiting confirmation from Ivanka Trump that she will tell them what she knows about her father’s actions that day.
  • Spotify’s CEO defends keeping controversial podcasts by Joe Rogan
  • Some Israeli and Palestinian figures propose a two-state confederation
  • Industrial chic is on display at the Olympics’ Big Air run

Andrew Meldrum

Africa News Editor

The Associated Press

The Rundown

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MOSCOW (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron is set to hold talks in Moscow Monday in a bid to to help de-escalate the tense situation around Ukraine. The concentration of an estimated 100,000 Russian troops near Ukraine has fueled Western worries…Read More

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BEIJING (AP) — Chinese tennis player Peng Shuai has told a French newspaper that international concern over her well-being is based on “an enormous misunderstanding” and she denied having accused a Chinese official of sexual assault. …Read More

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump was in the Oval Office with his daughter Ivanka and Vice President Mike Pence’s national security adviser on the morning of Jan. 6, 2021, when he made yet another push to pressure Pence. …Read More

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BEIJING (AP) — Defending Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin missed a gate early in the first run of the giant slalom at the Beijing Games on Monday and was disqualified from the event. Coming around a left-turn gate, she lost control, slid and fell o…Read More

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JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli and Palestinian public figures have drawn up a new proposal for a two-state confederation that they hope will offer a way forward after a decade-long stalemate in Mideast peace efforts. …Read More

OTHER TOP STORIES

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Spotify’s CEO wrote in a note to employees Sunday that while he condemned podcaster Joe Rogan’s use of racist language, he did not believe that cutting ti…Read More

BEIJING (AP) — The Latest on the Beijing Winter Olympics : ___ The Russians have solidified their hold on the team figure skating gold medal, despite an unexpected fall by t…Read More

HIRAM, Ga. (AP) — In her pitch to voters, Jennifer Strahan introduces herself as a mother, a Christian and a conservative. She usually skips over the fellow Republican she h…Read More

Canadian freestyle skier Elena Gaskell twists and bends backward to grab her ski as she takes flight off the end of a manufactured ramp covered in snow. Associated Press ph…Read More

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Criminal Gangs Clash in Central Mexico, Killing 16 People

MEXICO CITY, Feb 5 (Reuters) – Sixteen people died in Mexico’s central state of Zacatecas following an apparent violent dispute between criminal gangs, authorities said on Saturday, as the state grapples with a spike in violence.

State prosecutor Francisco Murillo said 10 bodies were found wrapped in blankets in the streets of the Fresnillo municipality while another six were “suspended” inside a warehouse in the nearby community Panfilo Natera.

Two people who were transporting another corpse a day earlier have been arrested, he added, saying the person could be linked to the other deaths.

Last month, authorities found the bodies of 10 people abandoned inside a vehicle in the historic center of the state capital, also named Zacatecas, a few steps from the government offices.

Homicides rose last year, official figures showed: the state of Zacatecas registered 1,050 in 2021, about 200 more than the previous year.

Reporting by Lizbeth Diaz; Editing by Leslie Adler

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Peru’s PM Resigns After 4 Days in Office Over Family Abuse Allegations

LIMA, Feb 5 (Reuters) – Peruvian Prime Minister Hector Valer confirmed on Saturday that he is departing just four days after being named to the post, following allegations that he beat his daughter and late wife, creating a new leadership vacuum in the Andean nation.

President Pedro Castillo said on Friday he would reshuffle the Cabinet in light of the allegations, but did not address whether Valer would leave.

Castillo must now name his fourth cabinet in just six months, which he said will incorporate representatives of a range of political groups. It is unclear when an announcement will take place.

Castillo, a former schoolteacher and member of a Marxist-Leninist party, has moved increasingly to the right since taking office last July.

His first prime minister was a far-left party leader, who was replaced in October by a moderate-left politician, before Castillo appointed Valer this week.

Valer is a lawmaker and conservative Catholic who ran with a right-wing party before defecting to join a Congressional bloc that is friendly with Castillo.=

Peru’s prime minister is a powerful figure. The PM is the chief adviser to the president, and presides and helps appoint the rest of the Cabinet.

Reporting by Marco Aquino and Marcelo Rochabrun; Editing by Leslie Adler

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Mexican Authorities Clear Makeshift Migrant Camp Near U.S. Border

MEXICO CITY, Feb 6 (Reuters) – Mexican authorities on Sunday cleared a makeshift camp in the north of the country where hundreds of migrants heading towards the U.S. border had been holding out for more than a year in what rights organizations criticized as deplorable conditions.

Nearly 400 migrants have been transferred by bus to three different shelters near the border city of Tijuana, where they can remain “indefinitely,” said the city’s Mayor Montserrat Caballero.

Caballero promised help for those migrants regardless of whether they want to stay in Tijuana or return to their countries of origin.

“We’re going to pay for the transfers and, if they want to wait for their ‘American dream,’ we’re also going to support them while they wait,” said Caballero.

Dozens of security personnel, including soldiers from the national guard, were seen dissolving the makeshift camp, fenced by metal mesh, in videos shared on social media.

Families, including parents with small children, were seen packing up their belongings. There were no reports of violence.

Caballero said the troops were not armed and that migrants collected their belongings and boarded buses voluntarily because they had previously been notified they would be transferred.

But one Guatemalan mother, who had arrived in Tijuana a year ago, and requested anonymity, said she felt migrants had little choice but to follow orders.

On Saturday, Mexico’s National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) urged immigration authorities to speed up the processes that would help nearly 2,000 migrants at the southern border get documents to regularize their stay in Mexico or let them travel through the country without being detained. read more

Tens of thousands of migrants flee their home countries each year in an attempt to reach the United States, but many of them also seek refuge and protection in Mexico.

Reporting by Lizbeth Diaz Writing by Stefanie Eschenbacher Editing by Chris Reese

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Ecuador Sees Trade Deal with China at End of Year, Debt Talks to Begin

QUITO, Feb 5 (Reuters) – Ecuador expects to pull together a trade deal with China at the end of this year and will begin formal debt re-negotiations with the Asian country, Ecuadorean President Guillermo Lasso said on Saturday, after a Beijing visit with his counterpart Xi Jinping.

China became Ecuador’s top lender over the last decade, with millions of dollars in long-term credit tied to the handover of crude oil, large investments in hydro-electric and mining projects and other loans.

“In China we had a productive meeting with President Xi Jinping,” Lasso posted on Twitter. “We achieved great results in commercial openings, cooperation in health and debt re-negotiation.”

At the meeting the two countries signed a memorandum of understanding meant to pave the way for a trade deal at the end of the year, which would benefit Ecuadorean exports of shrimp, bananas, cacao, other fruit and minerals.

China said on Sunday the two countries have agreed to open negotiations for a free-trade pact. The commerce ministry, in a statement on its website, offered no details on the planned talks.

At the meeting on the sidelines of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, Xi said China and Ecuador should use negotiations on the free trade agreement as an opportunity to deepen practical cooperation between the two countries, China’s Xinhua news agency said.

Xi was quoted as expressing hope that Ecuador would continue to provide a fair business environment for Chinese companies to invest and operate in Ecuador, while saying China would continue to help Ecuador fight COVID-19.

Lasso, who took office in May, has said more trade and foreign investment are key to stimulating the South American country’s COVID-battered and liquidity-poor economy.

“It would increase the market by nearly $1 billion more in export opportunities,” commerce minister Julio Jose Prado said during a virtual press conference. “And that will mean we could almost be doubling the exports we make to China in various products.”

The countries have agreed their finance ministries will conduct initial talks on debt re-negotiation, as Ecuador seeks to improve its payment periods and interest rates.

Ecuador is also seeking to disconnect the handover of crude from outstanding debts with Chinese banks worth some $2.08 billion, according to foreign minister Juan Carlos Holguin, which would free up some $400 million per year in potential spending.

China will donate 2.5 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines for inoculation of 3- to 5-year-olds, the Ecuadorean government added.

Reporting by Alexandra Valencia; Writing by Julia Symmes Cobb; Additional reporting by Norihiko Shirouzu and Ella Cao in Beijing; Editing by Andrea Ricci and William Mallard

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Canada: Ottawa Mayor Declares S.O.E. to Deal With Trucking Blockade

By and

OTTAWA, Feb 6 (Reuters) – Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson on Sunday declared a state of emergency to help deal with an unprecedented 10-day occupation by protesting truckers that has shut down much of the core of the Canadian capital.

“(This) reflects the serious danger and threat to the safety and security of residents posed by the ongoing demonstrations and highlights the need for support from other jurisdictions and levels of government,” he said in a statement.

Watson, who complained earlier in the day that the demonstrators outnumbered police and controlled the situation, did not give details of what measures he might impose.

The “Freedom Convoy” began as a movement against a Canadian vaccine requirement for cross-border truckers but has turned into a rallying point against public health measures and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government.

Amid residents’ fury at the lack of official response, Ottawa police relocated some protesters and put up fresh barricades on Sunday, saying they are “collecting financial, digital, vehicle registration … and other evidence that will be used in criminal prosecutions.”

They also announced they would clamp down on people attempting to bring in canisters to refuel the hundreds of large trucks blocking most roads in the city center.

Protesters have paralyzed downtown Ottawa for the past nine days, with some participants waving Confederate or Nazi flags and some saying they want to dissolve Canada’s government. Convoy organizers say they will not leave until the vaccine mandates are ended.

Canadian Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said on Sunday that the government would not back down on the issue.

“We put the question of vaccines and vaccine mandates on the ballot … in the (2021) election and we’re simply carrying out the promise that we made with the support of the vast majority of Canadians,” he said on CBC television.

Amid incessant horn blaring and occasional fireworks, a polished supply chain — including portable saunas, a community kitchen and bouncy castles for children — has sustained the protesters.

The well-organized blockade has relied partly on funding from sympathizers in the United States, police said. GoFundMe took down the Freedom Convoy’s donation page, angering some U.S. Republican lawmakers who pledged to investigate the move by the website.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump and Tesla (TSLA.O) CEO Elon Musk have praised the truckers.

Police said they had charged four people with hate crimes and were investigating threats against public figures jointly with the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Trudeau, who is isolating after testing positive for COVID-19 last week, has ruled out using the military to disband the protest. Due to security concerns, Trudeau and his family left their downtown home last weekend and his location has not been disclosed.

The prime minister has said the convoy represented a “small fringe minority” and the government would not be intimidated. About 90% of Canada’s cross-border truckers and almost 79% of the population has had two COVID-19 vaccine shots.

Convoy organizers said they would refrain from using their horns on Sunday for four hours “as a gesture of goodwill”.

A senior member of the Liberal government said the ease with which the convoy shut down the area around the parliament and the seeming impotence of police was a “national humiliation”.

Senior opposition Conservatives who encouraged the protests, including taking selfies with truckers, did not reply to requests for comment. Last week, the party ditched its leader in part for not initially backing the blockade enthusiastically enough.

Additional reporting by Blair Gable; Writing by Amran Abocar; Editing by Lisa Shumaker, Diane Craft and Daniel Wallis

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