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The 2022 Wellington protest was an anti-vaccine, anti-mandate occupation of the grounds of Parliament House and Molesworth Street in Central Wellington during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. It began in February 2022 and lasted just over three weeks. At its peak, the protest spread over a large area of Thorndon and into Pipitea with approximately 1,000 participants. Protestors blockaded areas around the parliamentary grounds with their vehicles and occupied the lawn and surrounding areas in tents. Due to their large numbers, the protestors also camped on private property, such as the driveways and gardens of homes nearby. They harassed bystanders, including children walking to and from school, and disrupted local businesses. The protest was forcibly ended by police on 2 March 2022, and

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dbo:abstract
  • The 2022 Wellington protest was an anti-vaccine, anti-mandate occupation of the grounds of Parliament House and Molesworth Street in Central Wellington during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. It began in February 2022 and lasted just over three weeks. At its peak, the protest spread over a large area of Thorndon and into Pipitea with approximately 1,000 participants. Protestors blockaded areas around the parliamentary grounds with their vehicles and occupied the lawn and surrounding areas in tents. Due to their large numbers, the protestors also camped on private property, such as the driveways and gardens of homes nearby. They harassed bystanders, including children walking to and from school, and disrupted local businesses. The protest was forcibly ended by police on 2 March 2022, and the protesters had none of their demands met by the Government. The protestors were a mixed group, but the majority protested the COVID-19 mask and vaccine mandates in New Zealand, while others identified with far-right politics such as Trumpism, white nationalism and Christian fundamentalism. The protest methods ranged from peaceful to increasingly violent. Protestors blockaded areas around the parliamentary grounds with their vehicles and occupied the lawn and surrounding areas in tents. In many instances, due to growing numbers of participants, the protestors have camped around the area and on private property, such as in the driveways and gardens of homes nearby. There were videos of protestors skirmishing with and attacking police, and also several instances of some of them harassing and physically assaulting schoolchildren (mostly from Wellington Girls' College) for wearing masks. There were also been multiple threats by protestors to lynch politicians, such as Jacinda Ardern, Grant Robertson and pregnant MP Steph Lewis, partially by hanging nooses from trees on the grounds. Far-right groups involved in the protests included the fundamentalist Destiny Church led by Brian Tamaki, the ultraconservative anti-immigration New Conservative Party, neo-Nazi organisation Action Zealandia, and the anti-vaccine groups "Voices for Freedom", among others. The Cenotaph had a makeshift shower facility erected on the side of it by the protestors before it was removed. On 21 February, protestors threw their own faeces at police. Antisemitism was reported to be "rife" within the protests, with the Parliamentary grounds vandalised with swastikas, protestors misappropriating yellow stars, and messages targeting Jews written on car windows. There were also several reports of sexual assault from within the protest grounds. Despite the disruption to Wellingtonians, the police initially took a 'light-handed' approach to protestors. Otago University law professor Andrew Geddis suggested the police did not want to escalate the situation. As health and safety issues became an issue, police began to take action. Towards the end, some protestors turned violent and injured 40 police officers, putting eight of them in hospital. However, they failed to secure the removal of vaccine mandates or achieve any other demands. Once police removed the protestors, the parliamentary grounds were covered in rubbish, including destroyed tents, hay, and human excrement. They also committed arson while being forcibly evicted, causing damage estimated in the millions. The protests came during the most widespread outbreak of COVID-19 in New Zealand since the pandemic began, with up to 23,180 daily recorded community cases of the Omicron variant by the end of the three week protest. (en)
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  • left (en)
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  • 250 (xsd:integer)
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  • Arrests (en)
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  • 220 (xsd:integer)
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  • 2022-02-06 (xsd:date)
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  • horizontal (en)
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  • Canadian flags have featured in the protest to show solidarity with the protests in Canada that inspired Convoy 2022 NZ. (en)
dbp:goals
  • Reversion of COVID-19 vaccine mandates (en)
dbp:howmany
  • *900 police officers *150 reinforcements (en)
  • Convoy: * 200 vehicles * Several hundred Protests: * 3,000 * 800 vehicles (en)
dbp:image
  • Convoy 2022 NZ .jpg (en)
dbp:injuries
  • 40 (xsd:integer)
dbp:leadfigures
  • Highly decentralised Brian Tamaki Leighton Baker Chantelle Baker Matt King (en)
  • Prime Minister of New Zealand Jacinda Ardern Speaker of the House Trevor Mallard Kiingi Tūheitia Paki Wellington District Commander Superintendent Corrie Parnell Commissioner of Police Andrew Coster Kara Puketapu Dentice (en)
dbp:methods
  • Demonstration at Parliament House (en)
dbp:partof
dbp:place
dbp:result
  • Failure (en)
dbp:side
  • *Government of New Zealand *Ngāti Toa *Te Ati Awa (en)
  • * Convoy NZ * Counterspin Media * NZDSOS * New Conservative Party * Destiny Church * The Freedoms & Rights Coalition * Action Zealandia * Voices for Freedom (en)
dbp:status
  • Ended *Protests forcibly ended by police *Strategic failure for protesters *No concessions given by the Government *Campsite destroyed and blockade cleared (en)
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  • 2022 (xsd:integer)
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  • The 2022 Wellington protest was an anti-vaccine, anti-mandate occupation of the grounds of Parliament House and Molesworth Street in Central Wellington during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. It began in February 2022 and lasted just over three weeks. At its peak, the protest spread over a large area of Thorndon and into Pipitea with approximately 1,000 participants. Protestors blockaded areas around the parliamentary grounds with their vehicles and occupied the lawn and surrounding areas in tents. Due to their large numbers, the protestors also camped on private property, such as the driveways and gardens of homes nearby. They harassed bystanders, including children walking to and from school, and disrupted local businesses. The protest was forcibly ended by police on 2 March 2022, and (en)
rdfs:label
  • 2022 Wellington protest (en)
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