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Protesters Disrupt "Spirit Train" Sendoff: Two arrested, festivities cancelled

Protesters Disrupt "Spirit Train" Sendoff
Two arrested, festivities cancelled
September 21, 2008
by Dawn Paley - The Dominion

About 50 people showed up to protest the "Canada Pacific Spirit Train"
event Sunday in the Vancouver suburb of Port Moody. Taking a position
in front of the main stage, the group carried signs and placards, and
a large banner that read "Resist 2010: No Olympics on Stolen Native
Land."

While demonstrators banged on pots and pans, Gord Hill, speaking on
behalf of the Olympics Resistance Network, announced, "We want homes
for the homeless, not corporate invasion on stolen native land."

Betty Krawczyk, a octogenarian mayoral candidate in Vancouver who was
incarcerated in 2006 for attempting to defend a forest against the
expansion of the Sea to Sky highway linking Vancouver and Whistler,
said "there is no spirit on that train, this is all about money."

Most attending the event seemed relatively blasé about the protest,
which carried on noisily for over an hour. A woman identified only as
Gina led two children directly into the crowd of demonstrators,
yelling at Krawczyk and pushing other protesters' signs. The children
began to cry.

Para-olympian Peter Rosen, who will be accompanying the train to
Montréal, said that "these are Canada's games, not Vancouver's
games... [The 2010 Olympics] are a great opportunity for Canada." When
asked about the protests, Rosen stated "everybody is entitled to an
opinion, but professional protestors get it wrong."

Many at the event stayed closer to tents that were erected for the
Olympic sponsors including Rona, Yves' Veggie cuisine and GE
Transportation to house their wares.

"Spirit Train" tour manager and Canadian Pacific spokesperson Breanne
Feigel told the Dominion that "The train will move the Olympic spirit
across Canada," and that event organizers "respect everyone's right to
make a statement."

An estimated 40 tour staff will be traveling alongside the train in
vehicles. It is unknown if anyone will actually be riding inside the
train as it travels east. Organizers are planning to run a second
"spirit train" in 2009.

There were three separate police contingents that provided uniformed
and undercover officers for the event: the Canadian Pacific Police
Service, the Port Moody Police, and the Greater Vancouver
Transportation Authority Police Service. In addition, there was a
large group of private security guards from 'Vancouver 2010 Integrated
Security' on-site.

Police stormed the protest at about 2:40pm, causing a ruckus and
knocking over a number of participants. They arrested an unidentified
young man, and three officers carried him to a waiting police van.

As the crowd watched, an undercover officer assisting with the arrest
shoved an elder to the ground, and pushed her against the hood of a
car. The officer told the woman that she was under arrest for
assaulting a police officer. The officer that the woman allegedly
assaulted was undercover and did not reveal his identity to the media.

The woman was put in a squad car and taken to the Port Moody police
department. "Spirit Train" organizers did not make a statement about
the arrests.

In a press release put out before the event, the Olympics Resistance
Network stated "Canadian Pacific, the Vancouver Organizing Committee
and the International Olympic Committee call the train an 'ambassador
of goodwill.' A more careful read of history teaches us that the
Canadian Pacific Railway Company has been a key instrument in the
colonization of Canada and the genocide of indigenous peoples."

"With protestors nearly outnumbering spectators, the most spirited
thing today was the spirit of resistance against the Olympics and the
forced cancellation of the Spirit Train launch ceremonies," said Hill.
"We are confident that this same spirit will inspire others as the
train travels across Canada."

Corporate media reports emphasized the crying children and unspecified
"clashes" with police. Conservative MP James Moore told CTV news that
"Making kids cry to make a point is just a little bit over the line,
and that's what we saw today."

The "Spirit Train," left Sunday from Port Moody and will be visiting
10 cities across the country, ending up in Montréal on October 18th.

http://www.dominionpaper.ca/articles/2103

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