Saskatoon StarPhoenix

U.S. BACKS CANADA ON `TWO MICHAELS'

Blinken calls for release of pair from China

-

Top politician­s in the United States and Canada sounded off on China on the weekend, condemning the detention of Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig and signalling plans to co-operate in securing the release of the two Canadians.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken called the detentions “totally unacceptab­le,” in an interview with CBC News aired on Sunday.

“Using people, human beings, as pawns for political purposes, it is totally unacceptab­le conduct by any country,” said Blinken, who met virtually with Canadian officials on Friday as part of a round of talks last week between the Canadian federal government and U.S. President Joe Biden's new administra­tion.

Kovrig and Spavor, known in Canada as the two Michaels, have been detained in China on espionage charges since December 2018. Canadian officials have decried their detention as political retributio­n or “hostage diplomacy” by China, since their arrests came shortly after the RCMP detained Meng Wanzhou, a senior executive with Chinese telecom giant Huawei, on an extraditio­n request from the United States.

“We stand strongly with Canada when it comes to the need to see the two Michaels released immediatel­y and unconditio­nally,” Blinken told CBC. “We will continue to stand with Canada on that. I've made that clear in my own conversati­ons with Chinese counterpar­ts and we look forward to the day when they're able to return home.”

Blinken's comments on the matter echoed those of Biden, who pledged to help bring back the two Canadians during his summit with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau last week.

“Human beings are not bartering chips,” Biden said. “We're going to work together until we get their safe return.”

But it's not clear exactly how the two nations will achieve that.

“These are processes that are ongoing,” Trudeau told a news conference on Friday. “The United States is taking their role in this very seriously and we look forward to working with them on bringing the two Michaels home as soon as possible.”

Blinken has repeatedly declined to comment on questions about whether the U.S. is considerin­g a so-called deferred prosecutio­n agreement — a form of plea deal that could allow Meng to return to China in return for an admission of wrongdoing.

Last week, a Justice Department spokesman confirmed to The Canadian Press that prosecutor­s were continuing to seek Meng's extraditio­n to the U.S., where she is facing fraud charges.

In an interview with NBC'S Meet the Press that aired on Sunday, Trudeau said Canada will honour its extraditio­n treaty, accusing China of using “trumped-up” charges “to try and pressure us to release” Meng.

“The relationsh­ip with China and Canada is deeply coloured by the fact that they have arbitraril­y detained two Canadian citizens, simply because we lived up to an extraditio­n treaty with the United States,” he said in the pre-taped interview.

“They, shortly afterwards, arrested two Canadian citizens on national security trumped-up charges and have detained them for about 800 days and counting now, in an attempt to try and pressure us to release the executive. We, of course, are a country of the rule of law. We will not do that. We live by our treaties and live by the rule of law.”

Trudeau said his talks with Biden were “very positive in us working together to try and resolve this situation and hold China to account.”

After his meeting with Foreign Affairs Minister Marc Garneau on Friday, Blinken praised the Canadian government's work on snuffing out politicall­y motivated imprisonme­nt around the globe, by getting countries to sign onto its Declaratio­n Against Arbitrary Detention.

The declaratio­n, a project initiated by former foreign affairs minister François-philippe Champagne, is from a coalition of more than 50 countries opposed to the state-sponsored political detention of foreign nationals.

“Obviously we have to focus on bringing the two Michaels home, but more broadly we have to work together to establish a basic norm in internatio­nal conduct that this is simply unacceptab­le,” Blinken told CBC on Sunday. “That takes time. It takes effort — it takes sustained effort.”

Over the weekend, Michael Kovrig's wife, Vina Nadjibulla, told Global News that she hopes the government will “seize this moment” and convert the fresh U.S. support into action.

“What I took away from that is that President Biden has compassion for the unjust suffering that our Michael and Michael Spavor are going through, as well as that he understand­s that Canada has been paying a really high price since it accepted the extraditio­n request from the U.S. two years ago,” she said.

Asked how her husband was doing, Nadjibulla said she has received letters from him and noted “he is staying mentally strong.”

“His situation is so incredibly, unspeakabl­y difficult and he continues to stay focused on what he can control,” she said.

 ??  ?? Antony Blinken
Antony Blinken

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada