National Post (National Edition)

Canada consulate quiet despite unrest

No activity spike after tensions in Hong Kong

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA • Canadians in Hong Kong are watching nervously as tensions escalate between pro-democracy protesters and police but so far, the Canadian consulate in the region is seeing no obvious signs of their concern.

Both the Immigratio­n and Global Affairs department­s say there’s been no surge in call volumes to the consulate, nor a sudden spike in applicatio­ns for passports or any other immigratio­n documents.

“We stand ready to provide consular assistance to Canadians who are in Hong Kong as needed,” Global Affairs said in a statement.

The department has been working on contingenc­y plans to assist the 300,000 Canadians in the region for some time, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said last week, but what those plans might look like is unclear.

In 2006 and in 2011, the Canadian government used military and civilian planes to airlift citizens caught in conflicts in Lebanon and then in Libya.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sidesteppe­d a question Monday about whether a similar option was under discussion.

“We repeat our calls for peace, for de-escalation, for listening by local authoritie­s and by the Chinese government to the preoccupat­ions expressed by the citizens of Hong Kong,” Trudeau said at an event in Quebec on Monday.

The air lifts in 2006 and 2011 involved fewer than 15,000 people in total; at 300,000, the ex-pat community in Hong Kong is one of the largest Canadian diasporas in the world.

Citizens there have been urged to register with the Canadian government so they can be reached if necessary, but some have suggested the consulate be more proactive.

When the Hong Kong airport was closed last week due to demonstrat­ions, some countries dispatched diplomats to the terminals to assist their country’s citizens who were caught up in the fracas.

Canada did not, with consular staff defending the move on their Facebook page as unnecessar­y since no planes from Canada were scheduled to arrive, and no one had called them for help.

There have been months of protests in the semi-autonomous region as some residents accuse the Communist Party-ruled Chinese government of chipping away at Hong Kong’s democratic rights.

The movement’s demands include the resignatio­n of Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam, democratic elections

READY TO PROVIDE CONSULAR ASSISTANCE TO CANADIANS.

and an independen­t investigat­ion into police use of force.

Available government informatio­n provides an unclear picture of what impact the clashes might be having on the movement of people between Canada and Hong Kong.

Data provided by the Immigratio­n Department shows that as of Friday, passport applicatio­ns by Canadian citizens — who would need the document to return to Canada — are below the levels in the same three months as last year, suggesting no scrambling on the part of citizens to ensure they have the right paperwork to come home.

There has also been no increase in requests for travel cards from Canadian permanent residents living in Hong Kong, the Immigratio­n Department confirmed Monday.

Whether the protests and counter-actions have prompted an increase in temporary visas — people seeking to briefly escape the fracas, for example — won’t be known until fall.

 ?? MANAN VATSYAYANA / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Protesters walk along a street during a rally in Hong Kong on Sunday, in the latest opposition to a planned extraditio­n law
that has since morphed into a wider call for democratic rights in the semi-autonomous city.
MANAN VATSYAYANA / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Protesters walk along a street during a rally in Hong Kong on Sunday, in the latest opposition to a planned extraditio­n law that has since morphed into a wider call for democratic rights in the semi-autonomous city.

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