lördag 5 april 2025

Large police operation at the Canadian Parliament: “Seek shelter”

Wayne Seretis

Updated 00.24 | Published 2025-04-05 22.03

En man barrikaderade sig i parlamentsbyggnaden i Ottawa.
A man barricaded himself in the parliament building in Ottawa. Photo: Spencer Colby / AP

A large police operation is underway at the Canadian Parliament in Ottawa.

An unauthorized person has barricaded himself in the building.

“Seek shelter in the nearest room,” reads an alert message to staff and politicians.

The Canadian Parliament in the capital Ottawa has been evacuated, and a large number of police cars are outside the building.

An internal security message has been issued to everyone working in the building:

“Seek shelter in the nearest room. Close and lock all doors and hide.”

Ottawa police are writing on X that they have an ongoing operation at the parliament building and are urging people to avoid the area.

According to local media, the east wing of the parliament is on lockdown.

This is where Canada's senators and their staffs have their offices, according to the Ottawa Sun.

The public has been urged to stay away.

Allmänheten har uppmanats att hålla sig på avstånd.
The public has been urged to stay away. Photo: Spencer Colby / AP

Emergency forces on the scene

Later, police confirm that the operation is concentrated in the east wing, and that an unauthorized man has entered the building and barricaded himself there.

There is no information about the man's motive, or whether he is armed.

"No one is injured and police continue to deal with an individual in an ongoing incident," police wrote on X.

The same message states that all civilians should now be evacuated from the building.

Police continue to urge people to avoid the area and respect the cordons.

Local media reports that the police task force has arrived at the scene.

Senator Patrick Brazeau-Algonquin writes a greeting on X when the alarm goes off:

"Ottawa, be careful".

En stor polisstyrka är på plats. 
A large police force is on site. Photo: Spencer Colby / AP

          ..................................................   

Operation in Canada's parliament - man barricaded

TT

Published 2025-04-05 22.23

Ett stort polispådrag ryckte ut till parlamentet i Ottawa på lördagseftermiddagen. Arkivbild.
A large police task force was deployed to the parliament building in Ottawa on Saturday afternoon. Archive photo. Photo: Sean Kilpatrick//The Canadian Press Via AP/TT

A large police task force is underway at the parliament building in the Canadian capital Ottawa. A man has barricaded himself, Ottawa police say on X.

"There are no known injuries," the police write.

The east wing of the building has been evacuated in connection with the incident, which began at 3 p.m. on Saturday afternoon, local time.

People in the building have been urged by the parliament security department to seek shelter and close themselves in. The public is asked to avoid the area.

According to information from a journalist at the scene, there are a large number of police cars on the scene and also the police bomb squad, writes the Ottawa Citizen newspaper.

The street in front of the parliament has been blocked off.

 

 

EU ESCALATES: Von Der Leyen Prepares to Strike Back Against US Tariffs if Deal Is Not Reached Soon

World Affairs In Context

Economy

Tariffs lead to rush for luxury watches

Luxury watch retailers are now seeing a surge in demand in anticipation of the US imposing a 31 percent tariff on Swiss exports, Bloomberg reports.

According to John Reardon, CEO of the online platform Collectability, which focuses on used Patek Philippe watches, there is now increased pressure from customers who want to act quickly.

– Their reasoning is that a Patek Philippe is better than gold, better than bitcoin and definitely better than money in the bank, he says.
“It’s almost a nuclear attack on the economy”

Economic journalist Gabriel Mellqvist calls this week’s tariff chaos “almost a nuclear attack on the global economy.”

– This is among the strangest, toughest and potentially most destructive things I’ve seen in a very long time, he tells Ekot.

The stock market crash is partly due to Donald Trump wanting to redraw the way the global economy works, and partly because what is happening is “strange, hard to understand and unexpected”.

Stock sharks are now wondering when the upward rebound will come, but Mellqvist warns that even for “smart people” it is “easy to get burned” in situations like this.

Sources: Car giant pauses exports to the US – to be introduced on Monday

The British luxury car manufacturer Jaguar Land Rover is pausing its car exports to the US in the wake of Donald Trump’s tariffs. The Times reports.

The stop will take effect from Monday at the same time as the company investigates ways to round off the effects of the US tariffs, the newspaper writes.

– Our luxury brands have a global appeal and our business is resilient, accustomed to changing market conditions, the company said in a comment earlier this week.

Jaguar Land Rover has not yet commented on the information.

Today's stock market
54,000 billion up in smoke in Wall Street bloodbath

5.4 trillion dollars, equivalent to 54,000 billion kronor, went up in smoke in the last two days of huge decline on Wall Street. Bloomberg writes.

The S&P500 recorded its worst decline since the pandemic and closed at an 11-month low. In parallel, the technology-heavy Nasdaq stock exchange has fallen more than 20 percent from its peak and is now in a bear market, while the broad Dow Jones has moved into a correction.

Since Donald Trump took office, around 8 trillion dollars in market value has been erased, writes Reuters.

The plunge comes after a news-intensive week with Donald Trump's tariffs and not least China's countermeasures, followed by comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell that the tariffs could have a lasting effect on inflation.

Professor: Tariffs the biggest mistake since the Depression

Donald Trump's decision to impose tariffs on the rest of the world could be a worse decision for the United States than when the so-called Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act was introduced during the American Depression. This is what Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel says, according to CNBC.

- I think it's the biggest political mistake in 95 years, he tells the news agency.

He believes that Trump doesn't seem to have done his homework on what went wrong with tariff policy in the 1930s and compares it to the Federal Reserve, which instead learned from the crisis.

He further describes the market reactions as "self-inflicted".

Plastic pollution

More areas completely free of plastic waste: “Great”

Scientists are pleased that the amount of plastic pollution on Australia’s coasts has fallen sharply in the past year. The total figure has fallen by 39 percent since 2013 and since the last survey, the number of areas with zero plastic pollution has increased by 16 percent.

Denise Hardesty, one of the report’s authors, says there is still room for improvement.

– Although there are areas of concern, it is great to see a clear reduction in plastic pollution as people become aware of the harmful effects on people, communities and wildlife.

Plastic waste on Australian beaches is falling sharply

Plastic pollution along the coasts of Australia’s largest cities has fallen by 39 percent since 2013, reports The Independent based on a new study from the country’s research institute.

The results, published in the Marine Pollution Bulletin, are based on surveys in six metropolitan regions. Despite increases in some areas, the overall trend shows clear improvements.

Australia has taken several measures to reduce plastic pollution in recent years, including a ban on single-use plastics, which is believed to be a contributing factor to its success.