
IMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS Image caption, The country-wide protests against Covid-19 vaccine mandates are poised to enter a third weekend
The order came as demonstrations continue to shut down parts of Ottawa and Windsor’s Ambassador Bridge, the most important US-Canada trade link.
Blocking crucial infrastructure would be made “illegal” under the order, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said.
Protesters could face up to a year in jail and C$100,000 ($79,000; £58,000) in fines, he added.
The province will also provide additional authority so that the personal and commercial licenses of protesters who do not comply may be cancelled.
“To those who have attempted to disrupt our way of life by targeting our lifeline for food, fuel, and goods across our borders, to those trying to force a political agenda through disruption, intimidation, and chaos, my message to you is this,” Mr. Ford said. “Your right to make a political statement does not outweigh the right of hundreds of thousands of workers to earn their living.”
The country-wide protests against Covid-19 vaccine mandates are poised to enter their third weekend.
A so-called “Freedom Convoy” was organised last month in response to the introduction of a new rule that all truckers must be vaccinated to cross the US-Canada border. The protest has since grown into a broader challenge to Covid health restrictions.
Thousands of demonstrators have congregated in central Ottawa and Windsor, with smaller groups forming in Toronto and Quebec City as well as near provincial legislatures in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and British Columbia.
The trade disruption has been estimated to cost some C$380m ($300m; £221m) each day.
US officials have urged Canada’s government to use its federal powers to end the blockade – especially of the Ambassador Bridge – which has badly hit the automobile industry on either side of the border.