The streetscape of Toronto is overlaid in

our minds with stories from the G20 protests. In one such story, memorialized on
Youtube,
a man refuses to be searched, asserting his rights as a citizen of
Canada.
“This ain’t Canada now” say the police in the grainy video.
“This is G20 land.”
Such interactions were typical during a week, when, in an atmosphere
that approached de-facto martial law, over 1000 people were held in
inhumane conditions in the Eastern Avenue detention centre.
No one
knows how many people were detained, dumped from police vans without
money or cell phone in remote parts of Scarborough or Etobicoke,
searched illegally, kettled by police, sexually assaulted, or beaten.
The police continue to trot out the ‘few bad apples’ line, with only
two of their number facing investigation. However, Zexi Wang, a student
union leader during the protests, said violations of civil liberties
were routine: “In all of the demonstrations and actions that I went to
over the G20 weekend, people were snatched by the police, beaten and
harassed, sometimes for just walking by the scene of a demonstration. My
friends and I were beaten with batons and shot at with rubber bullets.“
Systemic repression doesn’t occur only at summit protests, said
Jessica Denyer of the Community Solidarity Network. “It's important not
to exceptionalize what happened during the G20 summit as just some type
of "G20 land" where anything went in terms of police repression. Tactics
of police violence used during the G20 are used everyday in poor and
racialized communities across Toronto-- from ID checks and intimidation
to assault.”
On June 27th of last year, during solidarity protests on Eastern Avenue, under imminent threat of arrest, I interviewed
an indigenous woman called Ray for the Toronto Media Co-op. “This is
real life, this is the real Canada.” she told me. “This happens
everyday but now you can see it. For us Native people, this is what we
know...how ironic that this day in June 2010 it's happening to you now,
as non-native people. We've got to stand up for each other. Because
whatever they do to Native people they will eventually do to everybody.”
Today, people are
gathering at Queens Park, the very site of the
brutal clearance by police of the ‘free speech zone” one year ago. For
Marcell Rodden, his arrest at the G20 did not dissuade him from further
activism: “We have to exploit every opportunity of freedom to challenge
capitalist authority.” he told The Spoke.
‘G20 land’ is Canada, but people will continue to struggle against capitalist austerity towards a better world.
Syed Hussan, a migrant justice organizer, said “ Since the G20,
organizations such as No One Is Illegal and OCAP have seen a surge in
new members, relationships between social movements that usually only
organize sectorally have greatly increased. The anger, and the fierce
hope that burns in the hearts of those that struggle for a just world
could not possible be dampened by such a thing as a few days of police
repression. For many this fire has actually grown hotter.”
(illustrations first published in Project Ballyhoo)