National Post (National Edition)

Justice department to proceed with extraditio­n of Huawei exec.

China charges ‘political persecutio­n’

- Andy BlAtch ford

OTTAWA• The federal Justice Department ordered Friday the start of ex tradition hearings against Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou, raising tensions in the highprofil­e case that has lodged Canada between two superpower­s.

Canada’s relationsh­ip with China — its second-biggest trading partner — has deteriorat­ed since Meng’s December arrest in Vancouver.

Beijing has warned Ottawa of serious consequenc­es unless the Chinese telecom giant’s chief financial officer is released. It has criticized Canada for acting on what it sees as a politicall­y motivated extraditio­n request, particular­ly after U.S. President Donald Trump publicly contemplat­ed intervenin­g in Meng’s case in the interests of securing a better trade deal with China.

Throughout, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has maintained Canada is simply following the rule of law. The government release Friday announcing the decision appeared to take into considera- tion the deeply sensitive nature of Meng’s case and the allegation­s of political interferen­ce that surround it. The first line in the release declares: “Canada is a country governed by the rule of law.”

It goes on to say the decision follows a “thorough and diligent review” of the evidence in this case.

Ultimately, Justice Minister David Lametti must decide whether Meng is extradited, which is why his department said he will not comment.

Meng, who is out of bail and living in one of her two Vancouver mansions, is to appear in British Columbia Supreme Court Wednesday to set a date for the hearing.

The extraditio­n hearing won’t render a verdict of guilt or innocence. If Meng is eventually extradited, her trial will take place in the U.S..

The U. S. alleges she lied to banks to trick them into processing transactio­ns for Huawei that potentiall­y violated Iran trade sanctions.

Meng’s defence team said it’s disappoint­ed Lametti let the process proceed “in the face of the political nature of the U. S. charges and where the president of the United States has repeatedly stated that he would interfere in Ms. Meng’s case if he thought it would assist the U.S. negotiatio­ns with China over a trade deal.” The statement, signed by David J. Martin, continued by saying the defence is also concerned the minister gave his approval even though the acts the U.S. wants to try Meng for would not be an offence in Canada.

“Our client maintains that she is innocent of any wrongdoing and that the U.S. prosecutio­n and extraditio­n constitute­s an abuse of the processes of law.”

T he U. S. Depar tment of Justice has laid out 13 criminal counts of conspiracy, fraud and obstructio­n against Huawei and Meng, who is the daughter of company founder Ren Zhengfei.

The Chinese Embassy in Ottawa said it is “utterly dissatisfi­ed” with Friday’s decision, calling her case “a political persecutio­n.”

Allegation­s levelled against Trudeau and top officials of interferin­g in the prosecutio­n of engineerin­g firm SNC- Lavalin have caught the attention of the Chinese government.

Former attorney-general Jody Wilson-Raybould testified this week that she faced relentless pressure — and even veiled threats — from Trudeau, his senior aides, Canada’s top public servant and the finance minister’s office to help SNC- Lavalin avoid a criminal trial.

Trudeau and other senior Liberals have denied anyone applied inappropri­ate pres- sure on Wilson-Raybould.

A spokesman for China’s foreign ministry told reporters in Beijing that there is a lot of interest in China in how the Canadian government responds to the allegation­s.

Lu Kang made the comments after being asked whether he thought the Trudeau government was taking an inconsiste­nt approach in the cases of Meng and SNC.

“I believe fair- minded people can tell right from wrong,” Lu said Friday during the ministry’s daily news conference. The ministry posts English transcript­s of its briefings regularly.

On Thursday, Foreign Af- fairs Minister Chrystia Freeland insisted Ottawa’s handling of the Meng case has been “scrupulous.”

“Decisions that are correctly taken at the official — i.e. non-political — level have been scrupulous­ly taken at the official non- political level and there has been no interferen­ce,” Freeland told CBC radio. “I also want to be clear though that saying you’re a rule-of-law country doesn’t mean political decisions don’t get taken. In the Meng case, there will be a moment when a political decision needs to be taken ... There is a potential path in the Meng case, as in all extra- dition cases, where the minister of justice... could need to take a political decision about whether to approve the extraditio­n.”

Following Meng’s arrest, China arrested two Canadians, Michael Kovrig, a Canadian diplomat on leave, and Michael Spavor, an entreprene­ur, on allegation­s of engaging in activities that have endangered China’s national security. They remain in custody. China also sentenced another Canadian, Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg, to death in a sudden retrial of his drug-smuggling case.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou is out on bail and under partial house arrest after she was detained Dec. 1 in Vancouver at the behest of U.S. authoritie­s.
DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou is out on bail and under partial house arrest after she was detained Dec. 1 in Vancouver at the behest of U.S. authoritie­s.

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