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Selasa, 22 Juni 2021

COVID-19: N.S. highway blockade ends after 5 hours, protesters vow to keep fighting - Global News

The Nova Scotia government’s decision to partially leave New Brunswick out of the Atlantic Bubble led to a lengthy blockade on a section of the Trans-Canada Highway on Tuesday.

Dozens of demonstrators set up the protest just after 4 p.m., on Highway 104 near Exit 7.

It came shortly after Premier Iain Rankin announced that Nova Scotia will open to the other Atlantic provinces on June 23 — but people from New Brunswick will have isolation requirements based on their vaccination status and testing.

Read more: N.S. announces new border restrictions with N.B. on eve of Atlantic Bubble reopening

Rankin said it was because of New Brunswick’s decision to open their province to the rest of Canada for those who have had one shot of the COVID-19 vaccine.

The news — announced just one day before the bubble was set to begin, despite the New Brunswick border measures being in place for nearly a week — came as a disappointment to those who had been waiting to see their friends and family across the border.

Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin, Progressive Conservative MLA for Cumberland North, issued an ultimatum to Rankin Tuesday afternoon: change the restrictions by 4 p.m. or Cumberland residents will block a portion of the Trans-Canada Highway, where they’ll remain until the restrictions are lifted.

Speaking to Global News, Smith-McCrossin said while she didn’t plan the blockade, she received at least 30 messages from people asking her to join them.

“I think that the people that you’re seeing here speaks to the frustration, the anger, the pain, the suffering that people have been going through,” she told Global News.

“We’re very integrated with southern New Brunswick. We have family that live literally 10 minutes away that have not seen each other since last November.”

Smith-McCrossin accused Rankin of not making a “data-driven decision” but a “politically-driven decision.”

“The people in our area are tired of being used … as his political pawns,” she said.

Interactions between truck drivers and demonstrators on Highway 104 became heated during the blockade. Callum Smith/Global News

Charlie Yorke, who owns a clothing boutique in Amherst, N.S., said she closed her shop early to join the protest.

Posting a Facebook Live video to her page, Yorke showed a long line of cars and trucks at a standstill on the highway, with people standing along the shoulder of the road. RCMP officers could be seen on scene.

“The traffic is blocked down for quite a few kilometres,” she said in the video.

“And this one’s for you, Iain Rankin … This is what it’s been like for us in Cumberland. We have been stuck just like these people in their vehicles.”

Smith-McCrossin to speak with premier

Smith-McCrossin initially said demonstrators were planning to keep the blockade “until the unnecessary restrictions are gone.”

“They’ve been waiting since November so they’re in it for the long-haul,” she said.

However, several hours into the blockade, tensions seemed to be boiling over as some truck drivers attempted to get through.

Just before 9 p.m., Smith-McCrossin addressed the crowd and said she would be heading to Halifax on Wednesday to ask Rankin to reconsider the restrictions on travel from New Brunswick.

That led to the blockade beginning to end.

Shortly after 10:30 p.m., the RCMP in N.S. posted to Twitter to say traffic had begun moving through again at Highway 104 at Exit 7

— With files from Callum Smith and Graeme Benjamin

© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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COVID-19: N.S. highway blockade ends after 5 hours, protesters vow to keep fighting - Global News
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