The Daily Courier

Chinese allow Kovrig telephone call to sick father amid COVID-19

- By MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the Chinese Embassy in Canada says Michael Kovrig has been allowed to have a telephone conversati­on with his father, who is very ill.

The embassy says in a statement that they allowed this for humanitari­an reasons, and it also says Kovrig and fellow detainee Michael Spavor are being given better food to strengthen their immunity against the novel coronaviru­s, which originated in China.

“China’s judicial authoritie­s have ensured that Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor have received adequate humanitari­an treatment as other suspects of the same kind,” the statement says.

“Both of them are physically sound and mentally stable. Their lawful rights are fully protected.”

Since the outbreak, the Chinese government has “tried its best to address their reasonable concerns.”

“The authoritie­s have provided better food for all the detainees, including Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, so as to help strengthen their immunity,” the statement says.

“Second, given the relevant detention centres have been totally enclosed due to the epidemic, to ensure their contacts with the Canadian consular agencies in China, the frequency of transferen­ce of letters and parcels to Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor has been increased as interim arrangemen­ts.”

The embassy does not provide further details about the condition of Kovrig’s father.

“The Chinese authoritie­s, proceeding from humanitari­an considerat­ion, have allowed Michael Kovrig to have a phone conversati­on with his father as a special arrangemen­t within the law, when they learned that Michael Kovrig’s father is very ill,” said the statement. “The aforementi­oned measures have fully demonstrat­ed China’s goodwill, and Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor have expressed their gratitude.”

But Friday’s Chinese statement also maintains Beijing’s firm position since the events of December 2018, which have plunged SinoCanadi­an relations to a new low. Kovrig, a diplomat on leave who was working with the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, and Spavor, an entreprene­ur, have been imprisoned in China since December 2018. Their detention is widely viewed as retaliatio­n for Canada’s arrest of Chinese high-tech scion Meng Wanzhou nine days earlier.

She was arrested at the Vancouver airport on an extraditio­n warrant from the United States, which wants her on bank-fraud charges.

Meng is out on bail and living in a luxury Vancouver home, as her extraditio­n hearing remains before a British Columbia court.

Friday’s statement says Kovrig and Spavor are “suspected” of endangerin­g China’s national security and their cases are being handled lawfully while the Canadian government can’t “explain which law of Canada Ms. Meng Wanzhou violated.”

“For some time, a few people in Canada have been hyping up the cases of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor and comparing them to the case of the innocent Chinese citizen who was arbitraril­y detained by Canada,” the embassy says.

The update offers a small window into the secretive detention of the two Canadians; neither government has provided great detail about the conditions under which the “two Michaels” are being kept. Each has been allowed consular visits about once a month, but so far, neither man has been allowed contact with his family, or access to a lawyer.

Dominic Barton, Canada’s ambassador to China, recently said little is being said about the two men to adhere to the wishes of their families.

The Canadian government maintains the two are being arbitraril­y detained. The office of Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Phillipe Champagne had no further comment on Friday.

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 ?? The Canadian Press ?? North East Asia senior adviser Michael Kovrig speaks during an interview in Hong Kong.
The Canadian Press North East Asia senior adviser Michael Kovrig speaks during an interview in Hong Kong.

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