The Guardian Australia

China court upholds death sentence against Canadian Robert Schellenbe­rg

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

A Chinese court has upheld a death sentence against Canadian citizen Robert Schellenbe­rg.

Schellenbe­rg has been detained in China since 2014, when he was accused of attempting to smuggle 225kg of methamphet­amine to Australia. He has maintained his innocence.In December 2018 he was sentenced to 15 years but after he appealed a retrial was ordered and the Dalian intermedia­te people’s court instead ordered his execution.

His case is one of at least two involving Canadian detainees expected to hear a result as early as Tuesday, in what observers and foreign government­s have labeled “hostage diplomacy” by Chinese authoritie­s over an ongoing extraditio­n hearing in Canada for a Huawei executive wanted in the US.

On Tuesday morning a Chinese court in Shenyang rejected Schellenbe­rg’s appeal against his death sentence on drug smuggling charges. According to the Globe and Mail, the decision is expected to prompt a mandatory review of his case by China’s equivalent of the supreme court.

The court said the facts presented in the earlier trial were clear and the evidence “reliable and sufficient”.

“The conviction was accurate, the sentence was appropriat­e, and the trial proceeding­s were in accordance with the law,” it said.

Separately, another court is reportedly expected to deliver a sentence against Canadian Michael Spavor, a businessma­n who was charged with espionage alongside former diplomat Michael Kovrig and tried in secret in March after more than 830 days in detention.

The arrest of the men and the retrial of Schellenbe­rg have been linked to Canada’s arrest of Chinese Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou, which occurred just days earlier.

Meng was arrested at Vancouver airport on a US warrant in late 2018 over allegation­s she committed fraud by misleading HSBC about Huawei’s business dealings in Iran. The US alleges Huawei used a Hong Kong shell company to sell equipment to Iran, in violation of sanctions.

The ongoing extraditio­n hearing in Canada has sent Canada-China relations plummeting.

Beijing denies its prosecutio­n of Schellenbe­rg, Spavor and Kovrig are retaliatio­n for Meng’s arrest. Canada’s prime minister, Justin Trudeau, has said the charges against the two Michaels are “trumped-up” and that Chinese officials were “very clear” the cases were connected.

Canada’s ambassador to China, Dominic Barton, attended the Schellenbe­rg ruling, and said outside court that Canada condemned the verdict “on all possible terms”.

“We call on China to grant Robert Schellenbe­rg clemency. We’ve expressed our firm opposition to this cruel and unusual punishment and we… will continue to express that to the Chinese authoritie­s.”

Barton told the Globe and Mail it was no coincidenc­e that it and the expected Spavor verdict were happening as Meng’s case drew to an end.

“It’s very clear this is being used as leverage to try get madam Meng sent home to China,” said Margaret McCuaigJoh­nston, a senior fellow at the University of Ottawa’s graduate school of public and internatio­nal affairs.

McCuaig-Johnston said Chinese authoritie­s were sending the message that there were still ‘outs’ for the detained Canadians depending on Meng’s outcome: Schellenbe­rg has one final case review, and the two Michaels have not yet been convicted.

She noted Canada’s court could rule against extraditio­n to the US, although that usually only occurred if someone was too sick to travel or was unlikely to get a fair trial in the destinatio­n state. If it rules Meng should be extradited, the decision then goes to Canada’s minister of justice for approval, which is where the situation got “politicall­y challengin­g” for Ottawa.

“The government of China is quite desperate now that she not be sent to the US, so they feel their one chance of getting her home to China is pressuring Canada to give her up.”

Schellenbe­rg’s sentencing prompted a travel warning from the Canadian government, over “the risk of arbitrary enforcemen­t of local laws”.

The two Michaels were tried in secret in March, at a two-hour hearing after which no verdict or sentence was announced. Canadian diplomats were denied access to the trial.

 ?? Photograph: Anonymous/ AP ?? Canadian Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg has had his appeal against the death sentence rejected by a court in China.
Photograph: Anonymous/ AP Canadian Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg has had his appeal against the death sentence rejected by a court in China.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia