VICTORIA, BC
Over 400 people gathered to oppose the 2010 Olympic Torch Relay in Victoria on Friday, October 30th at an “Anti-Olympics Festival” and “Zombie March” organized by No2010 Victoria. The march succeeded in disrupting the relay, and security personnel were forced to extinguish the torch, load it in a van, and reroute it in order to reach the Legislature.
“Our events were a victory for rights and justice,” said No2010 spokesperson Zoe Blunt. “We took a strong stand on respecting indigenous rights to land, defending civil rights, and ending poverty, and people across the country are thanking us for our dedication.”
The day of action against Torch Relay celebrations began with a “Five Ring Circus” featuring speakers, performance art, puppets and satirical competitions such as the “Binners’ Olympics,” the “Tour de Misplaced Finance” and “Queer Wrestling.”
“It was a lot of fun!” said Bitey the Bed Bug, one of the anti-Olympics mascots.
Later in the afternoon, a “Zombie March” replete with stilt walkers, a marching band and a giant “Ghost Salmon” puppet wove through city streets and blocked a major intersection outside an RBC bank for over 30 minutes. RBC is one of the Vancouver Winter Olympics’ most important sponsors and a major investor in the tar sands, the most environmentally destructive project in Canada.
“We wanted to expose the empty rhetoric of a Green Games,” said No2010 organizer Kim Croswell. “Parading a giant Ghost Salmon was our way of pointing out how wrong-headed government priorities are in the midst of global warming and the collapse of salmon runs on the West Coast.”
Continuing along the relay route, hundreds of marchers braving rain and cold weather cheered loudly when it was announced that the Torch had been diverted in order [to] avoid the procession. Marchers ended at the site of the corporate-sponsored Torch Relay Celebration, where they infiltrated the crowd chanting “No Olympics on Stolen Native Land” and “Homes Before Games.”
“Disrupting the Torch sends a strong message that blowing $6 billion on a sports extravaganza is far from popular,” said No2010 Victoria spokesperson Tamara Herman. “The people profiting from the Olympics are not the people most affected by cuts to sectors such as welfare, affordable housing, harm reduction, health care, education, the arts and- ironically - amateur sports.”
“The day of action was a day of solidarity uniting a broach spectrum of people,” added No2010 spokesperson Danielle Hagel. “It sent a strong message that the Olympic Torch Relay will face opposition right across the country.”
“This action demonstrates how effective we can be when we act together, even in the face of police aggression and unwarranted surveillance”, said Blunt. “The group was strong, and showed remarkable self-control and commitment to the cause. We want to congratulate everyone who joined in.”
Montreal, QC
In response to a call sent out by the Olympics Resistance Network in Vancouver, more than two hundred anti-Olympics protestors noisily disrupted the celebration of the passage of the Olympic Torch Relay in Montreal. The group, made up of indigenous solidarity activists and other groups and individuals affiliated with the Montreal chapter of Peoples Global Action (PGA), an international anti-capitalist movement, heckled and disrupted for several hours the planned activities of the celebration, despite a massive police presence and a tense atmosphere at Place Jacques-Cartier, in Old Montreal.
The protestors held many banners and placards, and chanted the slogans “No Olympics on Stolen Native Land!,” “Shame the Flame!”, and “Homes not Games.” They also threw thousands of pieces of confetti into the crowd – the confetti had the words: “Why celebrate colonization of native land, gentrification, and corporate subsidies? Shame the flame!” They had a sound system and a marching band played. Before the flame arrived (an hour late), the police brutally attacked the protestors, forcibly cordoning them off in order continue the official spectacle.
Several protesters were thrown to the ground and insulted, while others were pushed and hit with batons. The Nazi-era Leni Riefenstahl film was shown on the big screen, and the cordoned-off demonstrators were forced to watch while they had shields and batons pointed at them by the police. Despite the police brutality, the disruption was a success.
“There is no shortage of reasons to oppose the Torch relay”, said Pat Cadorette, one of the organizers. “The Olympics are first and foremost a nationalist and capitalist power play. It is an opportunity for the political and financial elites to capitalize on people’s patriotic fiber and competitive drive. They are always organized by and for rich people, and it is always the more oppressed segments of the population who are negatively impacted by it: indigenous people, the poor, the migrant workers, etc. It is a colonial tradition of forced displacement, social cleansing, environmental devastation and repression. In fact, with regards to the Torch relay itself, it is often forgotten that it was first introduced by the Nazis to promote the Third Reich! The IOC and Olympic sponsors like Coca-Cola and the Royal Bank won’t brag about this, but it is nonetheless a historic fact!”
“At the 2010 Olympic Games in Vancouver and Whistler, the only ones who will profit are the already rich developers and sponsors”, explains a sympathizer of the Olympics Resistance Network. “At the same time, it is $6 billion of public funds that are shoveled into this. They chase the poor from the downtown area to make room for the tourists, they pass new laws to criminalize poverty, they install cameras everywhere, they spend at least a billion on security. At this point, it is illegal to post anti-olympics signs in Vancouver! This is insanity!”
Toronto, ON
Over 250 people took to the streets on December 17th to welcome the Olympic Torch with a resounding: “No Olympics on Stolen Native Land!”
Enthusiastic folks met up at 5:15 at College & University, gathering around a 15 foot homemade torch of their own, banners reading “Resist 2010 for the land”, “No 2010 Torch” and sharing in some homemade food. Organizers from Six Nations read the Declaration of the Onkwehonwe of Grand River Territory on the 2010 Olympic Torch Relay, Doreen Silversmith (also from Six Nations) spoke about how attacks on women are attacks on the land, and Mark C. from ARA spoke of Indigenous Youth rising up and taking power. Messages of Solidarity were delivered by No One Is Illegal-Toronto, No Games Toronto and Kitchener-Waterloo’s own Torch Welcoming Committee.
Grounding the crowd in the reasons they were there: to decry Canada’s colonial violence and expose the lies of Olympics Circus, chants began that would ring through Toronto all night. While the cold seeped, the MC got the crowd jumping and amped to go meet the torch.
Anticipating the torch taking a lil’ streetcar ride, people took to College Street. The first line of bike cops at College and Elizabeth set up as the protesters began a fluid game of cat and mouse. The protesters took some surprise routes towards Yonge and Gerrard where they regrouped and faced a row of riot cops, holding the intersection. The protesters gathered at the line of cops and turned back suddenly, going north, walking up Yonge St. to meet the torch. At Yonge and College they ran into the crowds there to cheer on the torch - some of whom started booing and hissing. Undeterred, activists handed out thousands of pieces of ORN and No2010 literature and some onlookers even joined the action. One spectator pushed over the protesters’ speaker. The horses arrived and tried to split the group in two but failed. Then a small group stayed back at Yonge and College, while the rest of the street party walked north, slowing to regroup and coming closer to the torch. At Yonge and Maitland, they decided to stop and hold the intersection, as people from the back rushed to join in. With messages streaming in that the media were reporting they had blocked the torch and having chased the torch around the city for nearly two hours (it was now 7:30), the protesters euphorically declared victory! They had forced VANOC to split the torch in to two, and brought their message right to the centre of the Olympic Circus.
While all of this was going on, the March in Honour of Harriet Nahanee, led by indigenous women, had split off to follow the torch into Nathan Phillips Square, where an activist free-climbed an arch directly opposite the stage and hung a banner reading “Gego Olympics Da-Te-Snoon Nishnaabe-Giing Ga-Gmooding” (“No Olympics on Stolen Native Land” in Anishinaabemowin). Anti-Olympic protesters had infiltrated the crowd, holding up banners and handing out flyers, and booing the flame as it left Nathan Phillips Square at around 9:30pm. The banner stayed up till the end of the festivities and the climber only got a $100 ticket.
Six Nations/Oneida First Nation
Six Nations community activists succeeded in diverting the Olympic Torch from the heart of the Grand River territory. Instead, torchbearers took turns running it around a parking lot. “It’s the first time where any person who has stood up against these torch and Olympics has actually had a success in being able to move the celebration,’’ protest spokeswoman Missy Elliott said. A Declaration stated “This land is not conquered. We are not Canadian… We hereby affirm our peaceful opposition to the entry and progression of the 2010 Olympic Torch into and through our territory.”
A day later, a blockade in Oneida First Nation, near London, forced the torch to re-route off the reserve entirely. Citing so-called safety concerns, the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic Winter Games said they would not be visiting Oneida, as there were members pledging to disrupt the relay and prohibit the flame from entering their community.
London, ON
This Christmas Eve more than 40 people gathered at the main gate to Victoria Park in London to protest the Olympic torch relay. Large banners were held up, free food was provided by ‘Food Not Games’, and speakers from several community groups chanted and delivered their message to the crowds as the torch was about to arrive for a celebration.
During this protest hundreds of flyers from the Olympic Resistance Network and NO2010 were handed out to people as they arrived to see the torch. Several people stopped to learn more and some joined us, including a few ‘Torch Relay’ volunteers who put NO2010 stickers over their name tags and started handing out our flyers instead of Coke-branded Canadian flags.
After speaking out at the gate, folks marched into the park chanting ‘No Olympics on Stolen Native Land’. After ‘welcoming’ the torch with boos and chants, people regrouped at the main gate.
‘Food not Games’ was a central message, and during the over-financed ‘celebration’ not a single free meal was given out in the entire city - except ours. ‘Food not Games’ served a healthy holiday meal to anyone who thought free food was a better deal than an overpriced flame. Chants of ‘Food Not Games, Homes Not Games’ were heard clearly by the hundreds who left the ‘celebration’ midway through.
A roll of stickers was also distributed to hundreds of spectators, and the stickers made their way onto numerous relay vehicles, infrastructure, and corporate propaganda and advertising while children spoke of the need for ‘education not games’ and
mothers spoke of fighting for a future for the next generation.
Minus the ignorant patriots, classless classists, and preposterous police presence, it was a formidable family friendly protest.
Stratford, ON
At noon, December 27th, a group of people assembled on the front steps of Stratford’s city hall to voice their opposition to the Olympic Torch’s passage through the town.
Carrying banners and signs painted with messages of Indigenous sovereignty, environmental preservation and anti-poverty advocacy, they were successful in informing many crowd-goers of the detrimental effects of the 2010 games. A large percentage of people that came out to see the torch were receptive to the group’s messages, stopping to listen to their speeches or giving a passing thumbs up.
Consisting of a handful of Stratford residents and a few allies from Guelph, the group demonstrated outside City Hall for about an hour before moving into the pro-Olympic crowd with their banners and signs, shouting anti-Olympic slogans and statistics. When the city’s PA system started blasting the national anthem, the small group drowned it out with their chant of “No Olympics On Stolen Native Land.” They continued to disrupt the national anthem despite being physically and verbally assaulted by crowd-goers. It was clear that the protesters were more vulnerable to pro-Olympics animosity because they were so few in number. The crowd was much more violent and confrontational towards them than they would have been towards a larger group of demonstrators.
They then marched down Ontario Street, along the route that had been cleared and blocked off to allow the torch runners passage. Flanked by police officers, they proceeded down Stratford’s main drag, chanting and calling out for the crowd to question Canada’s 6-billion dollar Olympic expenditure when their own community is lacking in affordable housing, adequate social programming and suffers from epidemic rates of poverty, crime and drug abuse.
Kitchener, ON
On Saturday December 27th, in Kitchener Ontario over 200 people headed the call out for a public mobilization against the 2010 Olympic Torch and acted in solidarity with those on the west coast of this country who are being negatively impacted because of the upcoming winter games.
“The Olympic games are not about sport, culture, and international co-operation and understanding, as our government, the IOC and VANOC, and the corporate sponsors portray with their well-funded propaganda” said AW@L media representative for the event, Dan Kellar. He continued, “They are about privatizing indigenous land, transferring public wealth to developers and corporations, destroying ecosystems for unsustainable and irresponsible developments, implementing the integrated police state, and a program of social warfare on those deemed undesirable to the Olympic whitewashing and greenwashing campaigns.”
The demonstration consisted of 3 parts, starting with a rally with speakers including David Eby of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA), Mark Corbiere from KW Anti-Racist Action, and Six Nations youth Melissa Elliot and Jon Henhawk - who fired up the crowd with messages of resistance to colonization and on-the-ground impacts of the Olympics and the system it represents.
The early evening gathering in Victoria Park was under heavy police surveillance as allies from across Ontario and the northeastern states assembled themselves to start the second portion of the event - the march.
AW@L’s Climate Change Containment Unit (CCCU) led the march, carrying a 5m “torch” ahead of the crowd which had 12 large and colourfully messaged banners and placards reading, among other things “No Olympics on Stolen Native Land”, “Fascist Colonial Past, Corporate Colonial Present”, and “From Tibet to Turtle Island, Resist Colonial Occupation.”
As the march snaked through the streets chanting confidently along the way, two banners were dropped across from the Royal Bank of Canada calling for a boycott of this premiere Olympic sponsor. The government of Canada and the RBC were then publicly shamed for their role in the ongoing genocide of indigenous people and their support for the criminal developments of Alberta’s tar sands - a project that has fast become the single largest point source for future-destroying pollution on the planet. Canada was further shamed for their refusal to sign the UN’s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
Eventually, the march reached City Hall, where the publicly-funded advertisement for the RBC and Coca-Cola was underway. After a declaration of resistance was issued over the loud speakers, the marchers peacefully erected their banners around the crowd - wherever you turned your head, you could see the messages they held. Thousands of sheets of information were welcomingly received by the general public as the Olympic veil was lifted from their eyes, and the true meaning of the Olympics were revealed.
Guelph, ON
In Guelph, a torch bearer fell to the ground, dropping the torch after the protest and torch had a collision. As protesters neared the intersection of Macdonnell and Wyndham, some Torch Relay vans passed them going the other way, and then to their surprise the group of runners turned as well. The torch route was supposed to be along Carden Street, but instead they basically ran right into the protest one street to the north. In the confusion, one of the torch bearers fell and protester Brittney Simpson was arrested. Although she was charged with Assault, people who witnessed what happened said the only physical contact they saw was a protester being hit by one of the RCMP security runners.
According to Leslie Wilson, a community organizer who attended the protest: “There seemed to be miscommunication about which route the torch should take. The whole thing escalated because the torch security was ill-prepared and the police over-reacted.”
Winnipeg, MB
In Winnipeg, the torch parade was blockaded for fifteen minutes, forcing the relay team to extinguish the torch and transport it forward in a truck. While passing through Treaty One territory, Roseau River Anishnabe First Nation Chief Terry Nelson made clear “we cannot allow those athletes to go home believing that Canada is a bastion of human rights. We, as indigenous people, are not terrorists. There is no list of over 500 murdered and missing white women killed by indigenous men, there is however a list of over 500 murdered and missing indigenous women, most of those women were killed by white men.”
Edmonton, AB
In Edmonton, dozens of people protested the official Olympics ceremony, while drawing a link between the Games and the Tar Sands in Alberta. Three people were handcuffed and detained on the torch route for allegedly swearing at the torch. They were later released without charge.
[Reports collected and modified from a variety of sources, including (but not limited to) NO2010 Victoria, AW@L, ORN-O and the Vancouver Media Co-Op. Our apologies to those protests we did not include reports on, such as those in Sept-Iles, Kanahwake First Nations, Quebec City, Barrie, Saskatoon, Prince George and any others we may have missed.]