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WSWS : News
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America : Canada
More evidence of police brutality produced at Toronto "riot"
trial
By Henry Michaels
28 April 2003
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Further evidence of systemic police brutality and provocation
emerged last week at the trial of three anti-poverty activists
charged with riot offences in connection with a June 2000 demonstration
at the Ontario legislature in Queens Park, Toronto. The
trial, which represents a major government attack on the right
to protest, has been under way in Toronto for more than three
months.
York University political science professor David McNally testified
that he saw police commit an unprovoked beating on one of the
three defendants, Gaetan Heroux. McNally said he did not leave
after violence erupted at the demonstration because he wanted
to bear witness to the harsh police response
against legitimate protest.
McNally said he was at Queens Park with a delegation
of about a dozen members of the York University Faculty Association
when he observed Heroux on the ground, face-down, almost
spread-eagled, being hit by police officers with truncheons.
I thought that he was being badly beaten, McNally
said. Mr. Heroux tried at least once to get to his knees
and then he got knocked down. There was no one near him. I didnt
see him do anything that one could construe as causing that behavior.
McNally said he leaned over Heroux, tried to pull him up, called
for a medic after noticing that Heroux was somewhat dazed
but not bleeding badly, and then moved on after a medic
arrived. McNally said a couple of moments later he was forced
to dive behind a tree after police horses charged indiscriminately
toward the crowd.
In what amounts to a political witch-hunt, Heroux, 47, is charged
with participating in a riot, as is Stefan Pilipa, 27. A third
man, John Clarke, 48, a leader of the Ontario Coalition Against
Poverty (OCAP), is charged with counseling participation in a
riot and counseling to assault police. It is the first time for
decades in Canada that such draconian charges have been laid against
political protesters. The charges could lead to jail terms of
up to five years.
Asked by defense lawyer Peter Rosenthal why he did not leave
Queens Park when the demonstration took a turn for the worse,
McNally replied that he thought the use of horses against the
crowd was an affront to human nature, and that he and the other
members of the faculty association delegation felt obliged to
bear witness to an extraordinarily harsh reprisal
against legitimate protest on behalf of the homeless.
About 1,500 people joined the Queens Park demonstration
to protest against five years of vicious welfare and public housing
cuts imposed by the Ontario Tory (Progressive Conservative) government.
Government and police authorities refused to allow a delegation
to enter the legislature. Police then provoked a violent confrontation
by allowing demonstrators to overturn an outer line of barricades
before charging into the crowd with horses, batons and pepper
spray.
Testifying on April 14, Clarke said the demonstration was meant
to be a poignant way of trying to win respect for homeless
people. He told the jurors the rally was planned to protest
several policies of the Conservative government, including massive
cuts to social assistance and the reduction of protection for
tenants, which caused the number of evictions to skyrocket.
The demonstration was also designed to pressure Ontario Premier
Mike Harris to rescind his governments Safe Streets Act,
which Clarke said placed severe restrictions on panhandlers as
a way of removing, or socially cleansing, homeless people from
areas where they were not wanted.
OCAP sent letters to the premier, the speaker of the legislature
and several cabinet ministers, asking to address the legislature.
I thought we had a snowballs chance in hell of addressing
the legislature, Clarke admitted, but said he thought it
might be possible to achieve something less, such as speaking
to some cabinet ministers.
Clarke expressed shock at the violent police reaction, saying
the use of force actions (by the police) went right off
the Richter scale.
Police admit no warning given
The Tory government, now headed by Harriss handpicked
successor, Ernie Eves, has devoted vast police and financial resources
to prosecuting the case. Some 20 police witnesses have been called
to testify and dozens of photos and videotapes have been shown
to the jury. Police officers have flatly defended scenes of police,
both uniformed and undercover, beating, kicking and manhandling
demonstrators.
Police commanders have admitted not asking demonstrators to
leave the area before police advanced and not reading the
Riot Act to warn participants that they would be arrested
if they refuse to clear Queens Park.
Testifying on March 19, Inspector Wes Ryan, unit commander
of the forces public safety unit, said five-meter banners
bearing messages such as Leave now: force will be used,
Leave now: pepper spray will be used and Leave
now: horses will be used, had been brought to the scene
but were not displayed to the crowd.
Ryan, who was in charge of coordinating officers at the scene,
agreed with defense lawyers that it would have been wiser
to have the banners with him on the front steps to the legislature.
Ryan said police had brought a loudhailer to the scene, which
could have been used to address the crowd, but not used it.
Earlier, Ryan said that before the protest started he ordered
two officers to patrol the front lines with large canisters of
pepper spray as a clear show of force. Asked if protesters
might assume they would be sprayed by police, he replied that
was exactly what I wanted people to think.
His testimony only served to confirm that the Queens
Park confrontation was deliberately precipitated by the government
and the police. Nevertheless, the judge has ruled that it is not
possible for the defense to cast doubt on the conduct of the speaker
of the legislature and his security staff on the day or to question
their judgment.
The Eves government is determined to use the ongoing trial
to intimidate its opponents and suppress political dissent more
generally. The WSWS continues to demand that the trumped-up charges
be dropped. They are an affront to basic democratic rights.
See Also:
Cracks appear in police evidence
at Toronto riot trial
Jury shown videos of police violence
[18 March 2003]
Homeless activists
trial opens in Toronto
Canadas National Post demands harsh sentences
for anti-poverty protesters
[14 March 2003]
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