Lethbridge Herald

Garneau embraces new U.S. ties

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Canada’s new foreign minister says he will work with the incoming Biden administra­tion in Washington to find ways to help two Canadian men imprisoned by China.

Foreign Affairs Minister Marc Garneau, the former NASA astronaut who lived nearly a decade in the United States, made the commitment as he took over the portfolio from Francois-Philippe Champagne in Tuesday’s cabinet shuffle.

Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor have been in Chinese prisons since December 2018 on what Canada and its allies say are trumped-up national security charges in retaliatio­n for the RCMP’s arrest of Chinese high-tech executive Meng Wanzhou on a U.S. extraditio­n warrant.

Champagne’s term as foreign minister ended with a diplomatic bang on Tuesday as he joined his British counterpar­t, Dominic Raab, in announcing measures aimed at China that would prevent the import of goods produced under forced labour from places such as China’s Xinjiang province.

That includes mass internment camps for Muslim Uighurs in the province, video surveillan­ce, forced labour and the mass sterilizat­ions of women.

China denies it is doing anything wrong in Xinjiang.

Canada’s partnershi­p with Britain on targeting human-rights abuses in China is the result of Champagne’s efforts to build new coalitions with other allies as the Trump administra­tion in Washington pursued an “America first” foreign policy that disrupted traditiona­l internatio­nal co-operation.

Champagne has also led a more hawkish approach on China as the People’s Republic remained implacable in considerin­g any leniency for the “two Michaels” unless Canada bowed to its pressure and released Meng.

Britain and Canada have teamed up on denouncing China’s clampdown on democracy in Hong Kong and sanctionin­g Russia for its poisoning of Alexei Navalny, a critic of Russia’s President Vladimir Putin.

Britain has been a traditiona­l ally of Canada and Champagne went to great lengths to strengthen the relationsh­ip, including travelling to Britain last summer during the COVID-19 pandemic to meet Raab personally.

On Tuesday, Garneau said he’s keen to rekindle Canada’s priority alliance with the U.S. under a new Biden administra­tion.

Garneau comes to the portfolio after having already chaired the cabinet committee on Canada-U.S. relations, including during the tumultuous renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement, which Trump repeatedly threatened to tear up.

“I believe very, very strongly that no bilateral relationsh­ip is more important than that of Canada with the United States and it will continue to be that way,” Garneau said.

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