For release October 26
Rose Henry has had enough of the phone calls from the Olympic security police.
 The 51-year-old human rights advocate says an officer with the
 Vancouver 2010 Integrated Security Unit phoned twice a day for about a
 week. The intelligence officer pressured her to "meet for coffee" and
 to give him information about her own work and her fellow activists.
 Henry was "scared" by the calls and unsure what to do, so she asked
 her Vancouver lawyer for advice. "He said, 'Rose, you have done
 absolutely nothing wrong, and there's no reason for them to harass
 you. You can just tell them to f--- off,'" she reports.
 "I don’t want to deal with these guys," she says. "I know I'm right in
 standing up for human rights. I shouldn’t have to defend them against
 the police officers who are supposed to protect us."
 Henry also talked to fellow activists in Victoria, who offered support
 and advice. "I'm glad we are all on same page," she says. "All of us
 have done nothing wrong. It's like [the police] are trying to set us
 up, and putting words in our mouths."
 Henry is forthright in her criticism of the Olympics. "I would support
 the Olympics if it was a fundraiser for people in need, and if the
 money they're spending was staying in the community. But it's a
 one-way street – all that money is flowing out to corporate
 investors," she notes.
 "At the same time, they're chopping programs for the arts, battered
 women and disabled children and people with mental health problems."
 A cheerful and tireless campaigner for social justice, affordable
 housing and human rights, Henry has lived and worked in Victoria for
 27 years. She is widely known for her volunteer work to end poverty
 and homelessness, and for her legal challenges to voter identification
 laws that discriminate against people without current identification
 or an address. One such challenge goes before the federal court this
 year, with a hearing scheduled for Monday, October 26 in Vancouver.
 Rose Henry and other indigenous activists are speaking out against the
 Olympic Torch Relay launch in Victoria on Friday, October 30, starting
 at 2 pm. More info: www.no2010victoria.net.
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