The G20 summit will be held on June 26-27 at the Metro
Toronto Convention Centre preceded by the G8 summit which will take place in
Huntsville, Ontario. The secretive meetings will be attended by world leaders,
finance ministers, central bank governors, along with thousands of other
delegates. It will be the largest security event in Canadian history exceeding
the Vancouver Winter Olympics. Downtown Toronto will be turned into a security
fortress with fences, barricades, checkpoints and street closures thus greatly
affecting local residents.
While the G8/G20 summits will attract their share of
peaceful protesters, other more radical and fringe elements may try to
capitalize on the event. Agent provocateurs might also be used whose actions
could then justify a police crackdown and as a means to demonize all
demonstrators. The G20 summit will deepen police state measures, as well as
further integrate local, provincial, federal law enforcement agencies and the
military.
Security for the upcoming G20 summit will be the
responsibility of the Integrated
Security Unit, �comprised of the RCMP, the OPP (in the G8 context), the
Canadian Forces, Toronto Police Service, Peel Regional Police and other law
enforcement and security experts who will work collaboratively.�
Ed
Boltuc, a member of the G20 planning team for the Toronto Police Service
stated, �The Olympics that you saw recently in Vancouver was actually the
largest security event ever to take place here in Canada. The G20/G8 surpasses
that completely.� He went on to say, �There�s going to be a massive -- absolutely
massive -- presence of police and security on the ground like you�ve never seen
before.�
The Globe
and Mail reported that as many as 10,000 uniformed officers, along with a
1,000 private security guards will be deployed together with an unspecified
number of Canadian soldiers. Foreign dignitaries attending the meetings will
also have their own security detail. The federal government security costs are
expected to top $179 million.
As part of the operation, a two fenced security perimeter
will encircle the Metro Convention Centre and nearby hotels where delegates
will be staying. The RCMP are entrusted with protecting the inner security zone
which will be controlled by a 3-metre-high unscalable fence, as well as five
levels of security screening. Toronto police will be in charge of the outer
zone and will deal with any protests beyond the perimeter. Canadian
Forces responsibilities involve, �large-scale operational planning, land
and air surveillance, underwater safety and security for the venues and some
logistic and ceremonial functions. Support also includes drawing on the CF�s
ongoing partnership in the North American Aerospace Defence Command (NORAD).�
Heightened security will begin two weeks before the summit. In order to gain
access to the outer security zone, residents and workers will need to be
registered or accredited. Designated free speech zones will also be put in
place for demonstrators. Toronto Police have announced that they will be using
an old movie studio as a temporary jail to house unruly protesters during
the event.
The G8/G20 summits have become a platform for protests on
issues such as social justice, anti-globalization and the environment. A
government website section entitled Information for
Demonstrators points out that freedoms of opinion, expression and peaceful
assembly guaranteed under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms are not
limitless. The Criminal Code of Canada contains provisions that limit certain
activities including blocking or obstructing a highway, causing a disturbance,
mischief, riots, unlawful assembly, breach of the peace and others. Some of
these laws could be subjectively enforced and just as government grants you
rights, they can just as easily take them away. Most protesters will probably
remain peaceful, but some groups and individuals might have different ideas.
In the past, police have been caught using provocateurs at
rallies and activists need to be mindful of those who may attempt to infiltrate
their ranks and engage in unlawful behaviour. Council of Canadians spokesman Dylan
Penner wants the government to promise it will not use agents provocateurs
like it did at North American Leaders Summit in Montebello, Quebec, back in
2007. In advance of G20 summit, some Toronto activists have been subjected to harassment and
intimidation by police. Similar tactics were also employed in Vancouver
before the Olympics.
People in Toronto are already getting a taste of what to
expect during the G20 summit. A recent training exercise simulated
a hostage taking in the concourse level of Commerce Court, in the downtown
core of the city. The operation was comprised of Toronto Police Emergency Task
Force, along with private security personnel. The joint exercise was designed
to train police and security guards on how to communicate through a shared
radio system. During the G20 summit, private security will play an important
role in crowd control and emergency response. This is part of the continued
merging of the public and private security sectors. Another training exercise involved
two military helicopters flying around the Metro Toronto Convention Centre
and then landing in front of the CN Tower. This was to test the capability of
the landing area and practice transporting delegates to the venues site. These
various security drills are intended to check coordinated responses and
ultimately to confirm readiness for the summit. They are also used to further
acclimate increased police and military presence.
More than anything, it is protests and the threat of
terrorism which are used to justify these huge security operations. The
deployment of the military alongside police is increasing with their roles
seemingly interchangeable. Police tactics and training have become more
militarized. New weapons and technology first developed for the military are
often being incorporated into police departments. At last year�s G20 summit in
Pittsburgh, the LRAD which is capable of emitting painfully loud blasts of
sound was turned against protesters. This illustrates a more aggressive
approach in trying to control public dissent. Events such as the G20 have
become a testing ground for new police state measures and a trial run for a military
style occupation. In June, downtown Toronto will essentially be on lockdown
with rights and liberties severely restricted.
Dana
Gabriel is an activist and independent researcher. He writes about trade,
globalization, sovereignty, as well as other issues. Contact: beyourownleader@hotmail.com.
Visit his blog site at beyourownleader.blogspot.com.