Toronto police say a person has been arrested for making online threats targeting a mass rally held Saturday against Iran’s crackdown on widespread protests in that country.
Lots of of hundreds of individuals attended the rally on Saturday, draped in red, white and green flags emblazoned with a golden lion — the flag Iran used before the Islamic Republic got here to power in 1979.
It was one in every of many rallies that took place in major cities world wide, with 350,000 participating within the local event, in accordance with Toronto police estimates. In Vancouver, the police chief said about 50,000 people marched.
In response to Toronto police, the service became aware on Friday of a social media threat targeting the rally.
They allege the person making the threat stated he planned to bring a firearm to the protest with the intent of stopping the event.
Before the rally took place, Toronto police’s 32 Division intelligence services and the emergency task force executed a search warrant on the suspect’s home in Burlington.

Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and world wide, enroll for breaking news alerts delivered on to you once they occur.
They subsequently arrested a 56-year-old Burlington man and charged him with uttering threats of death or bodily harm.
The person was scheduled to look in court on the Toronto Regional Bail Centre on Saturday morning at 10 a.m.

Anyone with details about this incident is asked to contact police at 416-808-3200 or to call Crime Stoppers anonymously.
Iran has been gripped by countrywide protests since late December, sparked by an ongoing economic crisis. Though the economy was the initial focus, demonstrators have since pivoted to calling for an end to the Islamic Republic, with some even supporting the return of the ousted monarchy.
Iran’s government has cracked down on protests and implemented an online blackout within the country. Greater than 3,000 people have been killed since protests broke out.
Saturday’s rally in Toronto was one in every of many happening worldwide as a part of what has been labelled as a Global Day of Motion.
Foreign Minister Anita Anand announced recently that Canada was imposing additional sanctions on seven people under the Special Economic Measures (Iran) Regulations.
In response to a news release from Global Affairs Canada, the people being sanctions have ties to Iranian state organizations answerable for “intimidation, violence and transnational repression targeting Iranian dissidents and human rights defenders.”
Canada has now sanctioned 222 Iranian people and 256 Iranian entities, the news release said.
—with files from The Canadian Press and Associated Press
© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.



