The pro-Palestine group, carrying a banner calling for an “arms embargo now” was removed by police within an hour on Wednesday morning.

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Six protesters were arrested Wednesday morning for blocking a Canadian Pacific Railway line in north Regina, as part of an international call for an end to violence in Gaza.

More than a dozen bundled-up protesters, most wearing face masks, gathered at the rail crossing at Park Street and 7th Avenue at approximately 10 a.m., carrying a Palestinian flag and several banners.

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Standing in the biting, icy wind for over an hour, seven people were spread across the width of the tracks with a banner reading “Arms Embargo Now.” The same phrase was chanted throughout the morning, led by the rest of the group gathered nearby on the grass.

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Demonstrators said the plan was to remain all day, joining a national string of port and rail blockades meant to disrupt CP Rail freight lines in protest of their involvement in transporting arms from Canada to Israel.

Wednesday’s action is the second attempt by pro-Palestinian protesters to block a major rail line in Regina, after five individuals were arrested on the tracks over Albert Street and Saskatchewan Drive in November.

“We’re putting our bodies on the line, to make a change. We have a moral necessity to take part in this,” spokesperson Park Davis said on Wednesday, from the tracks.

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“We’re here for a reason and right now, putting pressure on the government is important.”

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The small blockade delayed at least two trains loaded with cargo, before police arrived within half an hour to move the group. Negotiations did not budge the small group, who Davis said were “committed” to staying as intended.

Leader-Post witnessed six people handcuffed and removed from the tracks by 11 a.m., escorted into cruisers on scene. All did so peacefully, one allowing an RPS officer to tuck their white and blue linen scarf into their bag, as witnesses chanted “shame” at officers.

Those remaining moved beside the tracks but stayed, continuing to chant “free, Free Palestine” and wave banners at cars passing by.

Pro-Palestine protestors on a CP Rail line in Regina
Protesters in support of Palestine call for a two-way arms embargo against Israel by blocking a Canadian Pacific rail line on Park street and and 6th avenue east on Wednesday, April 17, 2024 in Regina. Photo by KAYLE NEIS /Regina Leader-Post

A Regina Police Service spokesperson confirmed later that members were responding to “assist other emergency services” with the situation, and that “six people are under arrest” as a result of the demonstration.

CP Rail Police will be leading the investigation, with assistance from RPS. Charges, if any laid, were not known at the time of publication Wednesday.

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Organizers say the call of Wednesday’s action was for a two-way ceasefire in the ongoing violence in Gaza and for Canada to follow-through on a recent commitment to cease supply of arms overseas.

The federal House of Commons passed a non-binding vote in March committing to halting arms sales to Israel, formalizing a freeze on new arms export permits in place since Jan. 8. The vote has yet to be solidified as policy or law, and permits issued before January remain active.

Pro-Palestinian and human rights advocates say $28.5 million in arms permits have been authorized since the conflict began in October.

“Our government is currently funding the genocide in Gaza. They are selling arms to Israel as well as buying Israel’s arms,” said Davis.

Similar protests took place earlier this week in Toronto, Halifax and Vancouver, as well as at major airports in the U.S.

lkurz@postmedia.com

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