Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Chinese court orders new traffickin­g trial for Canadian

Case revisited in wake of Huawei CEO’S arrest

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BEIJING • A Canadian convicted of drug traffickin­g in China faces the possibilit­y of more serious charges after a court on Saturday ordered a new trial amid tensions over Canada’s arrest of a Chinese technology executive.

Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg was tried in 2016 but his case has been publicized by the Chinese press following the Dec. 1 arrest of the chief financial officer of tech giant Huawei on U.S. charges related to trading with Iran.

Since then, China has arrested two Canadians on charges of endangerin­g national security in what appeared to be retaliatio­n. A Canadian teacher was detained but released.

An appeals court agreed with prosecutor­s who said Schellenbe­rg was punished too leniently when he was sentenced to 15 years in prison on charges of being an accessory to drug smuggling.

Evidence showed it was possible he played an “important role,” said the announceme­nt by the Higher People’s Court of the northeaste­rn province of Liaoning. It ordered the court in the city of Dalian to try the case again.

Authoritie­s have released no details of the accusation­s against Schellenbe­rg.

The Canadian government said earlier it was following the case but has released no details.

The maximum penalty for drug traffickin­g in China is death.

In 2009, China executed a Briton, Akmal Shaikh, on charges of smuggling heroin despite his supporters’ protest that he was mentally ill.

 ?? MASAO MIZUNO, KYODO NEWS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The prison in Dalian in northeast China. A Canadian jailed 15 years for traffickin­g could face more charges.
MASAO MIZUNO, KYODO NEWS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The prison in Dalian in northeast China. A Canadian jailed 15 years for traffickin­g could face more charges.

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