Chretien, other dignitaries want Meng freed
OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government is facing contradictory calls to either stand up to China or give in to so-called “hostage diplomacy” — with particular pressure coming from stalwarts of former Liberal prime minister Jean Chretien’s administration.
Allan Rock is the latest former Chretienera minister to advocate that the government end extradition proceedings against Meng Wanzhou, in hopes that China will release two Canadians imprisoned arbitrarily in apparent retaliation for the Huawei executive’s arrest in Vancouver in December 2018.
Rock said Wednesday that Chretien himself supports his initiative.
“I spoke to Chretien this morning because he called me to say he agreed with me,” Rock said in an interview, adding that he did not speak to the former prime minister before making his public intervention in the Meng case.
Rock got further backup Wednesday in a letter to Trudeau signed by 19 former politicians and diplomats who urged that Meng be freed in a bid to win the release of detained Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig.
Signatories to the letter, obtained by The Canadian Press, included Chretien-era ministers Lloyd Axworthy and Andre Ouellet, former Conservative minister Lawrence Cannon and former diplomat Robert Fowler, who was himself taken hostage in 2008 in Niger.
It was also signed by two former chiefs of staff to Progressive Conservative prime minister Brian Mulroney — Hugh Segal and Derek Burney, who also once served as Canada’s ambassador to the United States.
“It has now been more than 550 days since the two Michaels were locked into a Chinese prison,” says the letter, also signed by Rock and former Supreme Court justice Louise Arbour, who went public earlier this week with their call to free Meng.
“Their detention was completely unlawful and unjustified. Reliable accounts describe their conditions of confinement as tantamount to torture ... We believe that the two Michaels will remain in their Chinese prison until Meng is free to return to China.”
The signatories acknowledge that “it does not sit well with anyone to yield to bullying or blackmail.” But they argue that standing firm is no guarantee China won’t resort to arbitrary detentions again in future to get its way.
“Indeed, if Canada resists the pressure arising from the detention of the two Michaels, China might well decide that next time it will need to escalate by detaining more than two Canadians,” the signatories write.
A group of senators, meanwhile, called on the Trudeau government to impose sanctions on Chinese officials over China’s treatment of its Muslim minority, its increasing restriction on freedoms in Hong Kong, and its arrests of Spavor and Kovrig.
The 12 senators are mostly Conservatives but some were appointed on the advice of Liberal prime ministers, including Trudeau.
In a letter, the senators said they want the government to use legislation, known as the Sergei Magnitsky Law, that allows it to target the personal finances of foreign officials responsible for violating human rights, freezing assets that are in Canada’s control and forbidding Canadian institutions to do business with them.
But another senator is pushing the government from the other direction. Sen. Yuen Pau Woo, leader of the Independent Senators Group, is urging the government to follow the advice of Rock and Arbour, who argue that Canada’s Extradition Act specifically allows the justice minister to terminate extradition proceedings at any time.
Trudeau and his justice minister, David Lametti, have maintained the minister may intervene only after a court has ruled on the Meng case and that, in the meantime, the rule of law requires that they not interfere in the matter.
Chretien, who cultivated good relations with China during his time in office and who has spent considerable time there on business since retiring in 2003, has indicated he would be willing to serve as a special envoy to China to secure the release of the two Michaels.
Mulroney first floated that idea last year, suggesting a delegation involving Chretien and his son-in-law, Andre Desmarais, who is honorary chair of the Canada-China Business Council.