Protesters blocked traffic outside a major military industry trade show in Ottawa Wednesday morning before moving on to Parliament Hill to condemn the ongoing violence in Gaza and Canada’s arms trade with Israel.
World Beyond War Canada (WBW) organized the protest outside the EY Centre, which is hosting the annual CANSEC conference, the Canadian Association of Defence and Security Industries annual trade show. While CANSEC has faced protests before, this demonstration comes amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war and just days after an Israeli strike in the southern Gaza city of Rafah set fire to a camp housing displaced Palestinians, killing at least 45 people. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it was a “tragic mistake.”
“The protest was planned to condemn war profiteering in solidarity with Palestinians and people in conflict zones all around the world who have been killed, displaced, and maimed by the weapons being peddled and sold at CANSEC,” a news release from WBW said. “The arms manufacturers exhibiting at CANSEC have raked in record profits from the military violence that has brought misery to millions this year – from Palestine to Sudan, from the Congo to Ukraine, from Afghanistan and West Papua to Ethiopia.”
During the demonstration, some protesters splashed red paint on the road and laid across it, blocking traffic. A large police presence was in place at the EY Centre Wednesday morning and police said at least five people were arrested.
“This is an on-going demonstration, at the conclusion of the event an update with charges laid will be provided,” Ottawa police said in a statement to CTV News Ottawa.
Protesters later moved onto Parliament Hill to call for an inquiry into the arms trade in Canada. Wellington Street is closed between Elgin and Bank streets, while O’Connor Street is closed between Wellington and Queen streets, Ottawa police said.
“A lot of people are upset because there’s an ongoing genocide in Gaza right now. People deserve to know how our tax money, our money as taxpayers is going towards supporting the arms industry in Canada,” said Adrian She, of the League of Peoples’ Struggle in Canada. “We need the inquiry to be independent; that is, at arm’s length. This has been done before for things like royal commissions. It has to be in-depth.”
In March, MPs voted in favour of a non-binding motion that called on the government to “cease the further authorization and transfer of arms exports to Israel”. Earlier this year, government officials said Canada had paused non-lethal military exports to Israel, though export permits approved before Jan. 8 remain in effect.
Protesters say Canada continues to do business with Israeli arms companies, and accused several large companies of being complicit in the ongoing violence in Gaza, including Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Elbit Systems, and Raytheon Technologies.
“We refuse to stand silent while corporations profiting from our people’s genocide are hosted year after year at CANSEC and while our government continues to maintain contracts with these corporations,” said Sarah Abdul-Karim, a member of the Palestinian Youth Movement.
Defence Minister Bill Blair announced $11 billion for military aircraft training at the CANSEC show Wednesday, as Canada faces questions from U.S. senators about falling short of the NATO target of spending two per cent of GDP on defence.
–With files from CTV News Ottawa’s Natalie van Rooy and The Canadian Press