Truckers paralysing the Canadian capital in anger at Covid rules show no sign of backing down, as several of the nation's provinces announced it was time to roll back restrictions that count among the world's toughest.
With authorities struggling to bring the protest movement to heel, Saskatchewan in the country's west said yesterday it was ready to lift all pandemic restrictions, with Quebec and Alberta also signaling plans to ease measures.
In the capital, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau - who a day earlier issued a stern warning the protests "had to stop" - appeared to shift tone, saying he understood "how frustrated everyone is" and that "the time is coming when we will be able to relax." "We're all sick and tired of restrictions, of mandates, of having to make sacrifices," Mr Trudeau said, adding, however, that vaccine mandates were the "way to avoid further restrictions." The so-called "Freedom Convoy" began in January in western Canada - launched in anger at requirements that truckers either be vaccinated, or test and isolate, when crossing the US-Canadian border.
Having snowballed into an occupation of the Canadian capital, the protest has sparked solidarity rallies across the nation and abroad, and by yesterday had forced the temporary closure of a key US border bridge, the busiest international land-border crossing in North America.