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Canada’s Freedom Convoy: The role of Indian-origin truckers and their divisions

About 18 percent of the trucking community in Canada is of South Asian descent.

January 31, 2022 / 12:02 IST
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Supporters cheer truck drivers on their way to Ottawa in protest of coronavirus vaccine mandates for cross-border truck drivers, in Toronto, Canada. (Photo: REUTERS/Carlos Osorio)
Supporters cheer truck drivers on their way to Ottawa in protest of coronavirus vaccine mandates for cross-border truck drivers, in Toronto, Canada. (Photo: REUTERS/Carlos Osorio)

Indian-origin truckers seem sharply divided over the trucker protests in Canada. The country’s truckers are protesting against their government’s vaccine mandates, and have driven their trucks–loosely named the Freedom Convoy–into the capital city Ottawa, blocking roads.

Truckers of Indian origin have chosen to either join this demonstration, which has largely been peaceful, or they have chosen to stay out of it believing the protest to have been hijacked by right-wing interests. About 18 percent of all Canadian truckers–protestors and otherwise–are those of South Asian origin, according to a 2016 census.

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What started it?

On January 15, the Justin Trudeau government rolled out compulsory vaccination for cross-border truckers. Those who enter from the US border would have to be fully vaccinated or have to quarantine for 14 days.