Ottawa Citizen

Some advice on China for Mr. Garneau

David Kilgourlay­s out three priorities in the face of Beijing's bad behaviour

- David Kilgour was Canada's secretary of state (Asia-Pacific) from 2002 to 2003. This piece was written in collaborat­ion with Peter Lamont, a retired military judge and former federal prosecutor with experience in extraditio­ns.

Beijing is incarcerat­ing many residents in concentrat­ion camps, forcing their renunciati­on of Islam, imposing 24/7 surveillan­ce, torture and organ-pillaging. According to the Australian Policy Institute, at least 80,000 Uyghurs have been forced to work in factories in other regions of China. David Kilgour

Dear Foreign Affairs Minister Marc Garneau,

Canadians generally want Canadian values, including respect for human dignity, to assume a major role in our dealings with Beijing. Nine in 10 of us told a Nanos opinion survey even before the COVID -19 pandemic that we distrusted China's government. Events since can only have reinforced this view.

U.S. President Joe Biden appears persuaded that there must be a strong coalition of like-minded allies to confront China on trade, internatio­nal security and human rights. Canada should be a leader in that initiative, but we must prioritize three related issues as well:

1. The release of the two Michaels

Former Canadian ambassador to China David Mulroney wrote almost two years ago: “We have to secure the freedom of detained Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor … we're also still in the grips of a misguided vision of China, one especially dear to the Canadian governing and business classes, that naively embraces almost everything Beijing has on offer … we must finally be open to the idea that, when it comes to engaging Beijing, smarter is better than comprehens­ive — and less is almost certainly better than more.”

Convention­al diplomacy to secure the release of the Michaels has failed.

The key is resolving the prosecutio­n of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou, and there have already been discussion­s between her lawyers and American prosecutor­s about a plea deal. I suggest that, as our new foreign minister, you and Attorney General David Lametti communicat­e directly with U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken and acting attorney general Monty Wilkinson to explore an overall deal under which Huawei Technologi­es Ltd. would plead guilty to some charges, and proceeding­s would be withdrawn against Meng and another unnamed individual.

2. Ending the off-loading of manufactur­ing jobs to China

Since China's 2001 admission to the World Trade Organizati­on, about 600,000 manufactur­ing jobs have been lost across Canada, partly because Beijing doesn't respect internatio­nal agreements. Guy SaintJacqu­es, another former ambassador to China, says: “(Canada) should put more effort into trade diversific­ation and consider expelling Chinese athletes training in Canada for the 2022 Beijing

Winter Olympics … (Canada must) be firm because this is the only language that China understand­s.”

This probably should include barring all imports to Canada from Xinjiang province, because so many are made by forced Uyghur labour. Importers could be required to rebut the presumptio­n that their products are not the results of forced labour.

3. Respond vigorously to ongoing genocide

The persecutio­n of Turkic peoples in Xinjiang began following Mao Zedong's military seizure of independen­t East Turkistan in 1949. The area has since been used as an inhuman laboratory for 47 nuclear explosions from 1964 to 1996, with radiation-caused cancer for many residents. Since 2016, conditions have worsened so much that, increasing­ly, comparison­s are made with the Holocaust.

We know from escaped survivors, leaked official documents and satellite imaging that Beijing is incarcerat­ing many residents in concentrat­ion camps, forcing their renunciati­on of Islam, imposing 24/7 surveillan­ce, torture and organ-pillaging. According to the Australian Policy Institute, at least 80,000 Uyghurs have been forced to work in factories in other regions of China.

In 2017, Xi Jinping began erecting a “re-education” gulag for Muslims similar to that establishe­d for

Falun Gong practition­ers across China after mid-1999. Inmates have been arrested without any pretence of a hearing or appeal.

Organ-harvesting from Uyghurs preceded that from Falun Gong (which began in 2001). Responsibl­e government­s and businesses worldwide, including Canada, should join the U.S. and Australia in boycotting anyone doing business in Xinjiang.

“Magnitsky” legislatio­n makes it easier for government­s, including Canada's, to impose targeted financial and visa sanctions on human rights-abusing officials in Beijing. The U.S. House of Representa­tives recently passed the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, now under considerat­ion by the Senate. The bill declares that unless U.S. Customs can verify that goods are not produced using forced labour, they cannot enter the United States. This is the most significan­t attempt to date to pressure Beijing over its mass detention of Muslim minorities.

As you settle in as Canada's new foreign minister, I urge you to pursue new policies with Beijing, both bilaterall­y and multilater­ally.

 ?? THOMAS PETER/REUTERS FILES ?? Workers walk outside what is officially known as a vocational skills education centre in Dabancheng in China's Xinjiang province. David Kilgour suggests barring imports from Xinjiang because so many are made by forced Uyghur labour.
THOMAS PETER/REUTERS FILES Workers walk outside what is officially known as a vocational skills education centre in Dabancheng in China's Xinjiang province. David Kilgour suggests barring imports from Xinjiang because so many are made by forced Uyghur labour.

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