National Post

China trade worries,

‘We’re confident the relationsh­ip will continue’ Jim Carr, federal trade minister ‘There remains lots of business to be done’ Dominic Barton, Teck Resources chair

- JoSh wiNgrove

OTTAWA • Ties between China and Canada are strong enough to withstand the arrest of a senior Huawei Technologi­es Co. executive while on a stopover in Vancouver, Justin Trudeau’s trade minister says.

Jim Carr sought to play down a developing rift between the two countries in an interview at his Ottawa office. A bail hearing for Meng Wanzhou, the Chinese tech giant’s chief financial officer and daughter of its founder, resumed hearing arguments Monday in Vancouver.

“In sophistica­ted trading relationsh­ips, there will be difficult moments — but we’re confident that the relationsh­ip is so important, and at so many levels, that it will continue,” Carr said.

The Meng case is straining ties. China summoned Canada’s ambassador in Beijing to explain the arrest over the weekend, and on Monday the foreign ministry accused Trudeau’s government of violating an agreement to speedily inform the Chinese consulate of the tech executive’s arrest. Some experts have also warned about potential retaliatio­n.

“We are a nation that lives by the rule of law, and that’s clear,” Carr said, defending Canada’s decision to act on a U.S. request for Meng’s arrest. “We have a treaty. There’s been no political involvemen­t on this file and the justice system is doing what it’s supposed to do.”

Trudeau’s government is hoping to deepen ties with China as his country looks to diversify trade beyond the U.S. under Donald Trump. Carr and other key ministers visited China last month, as the countries pivoted toward more bitesized trade deals after Trudeau’s push for a sprawling accord came up short one year ago.

Meng was arrested in Vancouver on Dec. 1 while on a 12-hour layover. She is charged with conspiracy to defraud banks, with the U.S. alleging Huawei used an unofficial subsidiary to do business in Iran in contravent­ion of sanctions.

Trudeau’s government has downplayed its role in the arrest, saying it had a few days’ notice but that it didn’t intervene. It emphasizes the judiciary is independen­t in Canada and maintains there was no political interferen­ce.

That hasn’t placated Chinese complaints. China’s state media called her arrest a “despicable rogue’s approach” by Washington and warned Canada, too, could face “severe consequenc­es.”

That makes Canada a potential casualty in the brewing U.S.-China trade war, though American officials are seeking to insulate trade talks from the dispute over Meng’s arrest. Her detention could have ripple effects, including on reform efforts at the World Trade Organizati­on.

Carr, who hosted a meeting without the U.S. or China on strengthen­ing the global trade group, said Canada would continue to push for change at the WTO. “There is a consensus wherever I have travelled, and with whomever I have spoken, that the Canadian initiative is positive,

JUST ... NOT HAVING EVERYTHING BE PIVOTED ON THIS.

that it has the right representa­tion around the table,” he said.

Trudeau signed a new trade deal with the U.S. and Mexico late last month, but it still needs to be ratified by lawmakers. Trump has threatened to give notice of withdrawal from the existing three-country deal — essentiall­y forcing Congress to choose between the new version or nothing at all. All that leaves Trudeau with lingering uncertaint­y on trade with Canada’s neighbour and biggest partner.

The new deal also includes what is essentiall­y a China clause, which gives countries certain powers if one of the others signs a trade deal with a non-market economy. Carr said he was asked about it in China.

“Yes, all the time — and we were able in short order to make the argument that this will not affect our relationsh­ip with China,” he said. “They seem to be satisfied that it was business as usual.”

Since Meng’s arrest, there have been warnings that influentia­l Canadians should avoid travel to China in case of retaliatio­n. But Dominic Barton, chairman of Vancouver-based Teck Resources Ltd., said Monday he would have no reservatio­ns about going.

“There remains lots of business to be done together,” Barton told BNN Bloomberg television, when asked about the Huawei case. “That’s what I think we should keep focused on — just having the broader relationsh­ips and not having everything be pivoted on this.”

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 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Protesters hold a sign at a B.C. courthouse prior to the bail hearing for Meng Wanzhou on Monday.
JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS Protesters hold a sign at a B.C. courthouse prior to the bail hearing for Meng Wanzhou on Monday.

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