National Post (National Edition)

Extraditio­n could take years to determine

- Mike Blanchfiel­d and andy Blatchford

OTTAWA • Canada’s cumbersome extraditio­n system means Chinese business executive Meng Wanzhou could wait years before her case is resolved even if she will inevitably be committed to stand trial in the United States, legal experts say.

That means there are no quick fixes to Canada’s current political quandary: resolving Meng’s case to alleviate the wrath of China, which has arrested two Canadians in apparent retaliatio­n, without alienating the United States.

China is Canada’s secondbigg­est trading partner; the U.S. is its biggest.

Robert Currie, a professor of internatio­nal law at Dalhousie University in Halifax, pointed to the case of Ottawa professor Hassan Diab as an illustrati­on of the flaws with Canada’s Extraditio­n Act.

Diab was extradited to France on charges he bombed a Paris synagogue in 1980, even though the Ottawa judge presiding over the case acknowledg­ed the evidence was too weak to have led to a conviction in Canada. Judges in extraditio­n cases aren’t supposed to examine the evidence as if they were conducting trials.

Diab’s case took six years to wind its way through Canadian courts before he was sent to France. Last January, after Diab spent years in a French jail, the French dropped all the charges against him for lack of evidence. He returned to Canada vowing that his mission in life had become to reform Canada’s extraditio­n law.

There’s no reason to believe Meng’s case will unfold any quicker, Canadian officials say.

When all is said and done, it’s all but inevitable Meng will be extradited to the U.S. because the Canadian system is tilted against the accused person, said Currie.

“The accused is not meaningful­ly able to challenge the requesting state’s evidence,” said Currie. “Diab’s case really highlights that.”

Diab’s lawyer, Donald Bayne, said the extraditio­n law essentiall­y gives judges no discretion.

“It’s a terrible and defective system ... (the judge is) a rubber stamp,” Bayne said. “And now we’re going to be the victims of our own defective system.”

Bayne and others have called for a review of the Extraditio­n Act. Now, he said, Canada’s faulty extraditio­n system will be on full display as the world closely watches Meng’s case.

“We get caught as the filler of the sandwich between these two giant superpower­s and we’re constraine­d by our own Extraditio­n Act,” he said. “China’s looking very hard at what we do here and if our extraditio­n system works in its normal way ... The world is looking at our process here.”

That leaves Canada entangled in a diplomatic crisis with China, which has threatened serious consequenc­es and has arrested the two Canadians, alleging each violated national security.

The Trudeau government has said Meng will be dealt with fairly and transparen­tly by an independen­t judiciary, but U.S. President Donald Trump undermined those assertions when he mused Tuesday about interferin­g in Meng’s case if it would help forge a trade deal with China.

On Wednesday, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Meng’s lawyers could use Trump’s comment to help fight her extraditio­n.

Currie said Freeland was sending “a shot across the bow” at Trump to keep politics out of the process. “Or,” he said, “it could also have been, ‘Hey you better stop the president from making those remarks because it might screw up the extraditio­n; we don’t want to give her lawyers ammunition.’ ”

Currie said Trump’s remarks raise the possibilit­y that Justice Minister Jody Wilson-raybould could block Meng’s extraditio­n on political grounds.

The minister has to sign off on the extraditio­n once a court renders its decision, but that decision is also subject to appeal.

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Meng Wanzhou

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