Alberta yellow vest protests lack violence seen in Paris, but anti-immigration anger simmers - Action News
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Alberta yellow vest protests lack violence seen in Paris, but anti-immigration anger simmers

The protest movement has now spread across the globe, but in Alberta, which may be Canada's centre of anti-carbon-tax malcontents, the yellow vest protests Saturday were free from physical violence.

Hundreds protested United Nations' migration pact and carbon tax in Edmonton, Calgary

Hundreds of protesters rallied in Edmonton to protest the U.N. migration pact and the carbon tax. (Scott Neufeld/CBC)

Four people were killed, hundreds injuredand streets were littered with flaming cars and broken glass as thousands clad in yellow vests partook in violent protests in France in recent weeks against a planned increase to the fuel tax.

The protest movement has now spread across the globe, but in Alberta, which may be Canada's centre of anti-carbon-tax discontent,the yellow vest protests Saturday were free from physical violence.

"We are Canadian, we're not anywhere close to that kind of radical," said Allison Prentice, who was clad in a yellow vestat the Calgary protest. "I'm proud to be here and represent people who care about Canadians first."

The burning anger, which seemed to be lit by multiple fuses, still meant threats of violence were on the lips ofattendees who linked frustration overeconomic woes caused bylow oil prices to the country's immigration policies a sharp departure from the wide-ranging motivations of French protesters who appear to be primarily concerned withwealth inequality.

In Calgary, more than 200 protesters,some accompanied by dogs also decked out in yellow vests,chanted "No Trudeau. No Trudeau"outside of city hall. Some yelled "String him up," others yelled "traitor."

"They hate our country and they hate our way of life," yelled one speaker through a megaphone, to cheers and whistles, not specifying who "they" are.

Calgary police said the rally was peaceful and no protesters were arrested.

Yellow vest protesters, including Rudy the corgi, waved signs and chanted 'No Trudeau' outside Calgary's city hall Saturday. (Helen Pike/CBC)

Edmonton also saw a large protest, with hundredsmarching from the Legislature toChurchill Square, carrying signs, some reading "No Global Climate Pact. Suicide."

Multiple posts on Canada's yellow jacketsFacebook page called for more drastic action.

"Look at France today. After four weeks of burning the cities, the French government cut the carbon tax. So what do we want? 90 years or four weeks until something changes?" wrote Robb Kerr on the group's page. "If you want to crush a government, you have to play their game You want to see them jump? Then burn down City Hall."

The protests were jointly against the provincial and federal carbon taxes, and Canada's plan to endorse the United Nations' migration pact, which outlines objectives for treating global migrants humanely and efficiently.

Yellow-vest-clad protesters hold signs outside Calgary's city hall on Saturday. (Helen Pike/CBC)

"I'm here for primarily the fact that I know many people who barely get by month to month, so until we can take care of our own, I'm concerned that themoney we don't have are going to people that don't have the right to have it, before our own," said Prentice.

Attendee PeterLebrunsaidhe feared the non-legally-bindingUN Global Compact on Migration would harm the country.

"I think that opens up a lot of possibilities that would prove to be negative to Canada as a whole," saidLebrun, another attendee at the Calgary rally.

Members ofSoldiers of Odin were also in attendance in Edmonton and Calgary.Theanti-immigration group was founded in 2015 in Finland bya white supremacist.

Members of anti-immigration group Soldiers of Odin, which was founded in Finland by a white supremacist, attended Saturday's yellow vests rally in Edmonton. (Scott Neufeld/CBC)

Stephen Garvey, the founder of National Citizens Alliance, a Calgary-basedpolitical party that says it's in favour of "integration not immigration," and one of the organizers of the Edmonton rally, said the sentiments expressed at the events have been building over some time.

"There's massive censorship of media," said Garvey, referring to the UN migration pact. "This is un-Canadian Canada has to be about the Canadian people. It can't be about people sold out to some globalist agenda to the UN, in Ottawa."

Speakers at both rallies decried the media, saying there hasn't been enough attention paid to their cause.

"There's no media outlet here today. The Liberals bought CBC. They're not coming," said one protester in a Facebook live video of the Calgaryevent.

With files from Helen Pike, Scott Neufeld