The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Canada launches initiative to stop arbitrary detentions

- DAVID LJUNGGREN

OTTAWA - Canada on Monday launched a 58-nation initiative to stop countries from detaining foreign citizens for diplomatic leverage, a practice that Ottawa and Washington say China and others are using.

Foreign ministers signed a non-binding declaratio­n to denounce what Canadian Foreign Minister Marc Garneau called unacceptab­le behaviour.

“Taking people from their families and using them as bargaining chips is both illegal and immoral,” he said by phone, calling the effort the first of its kind.

Other signatorie­s include Japan, Britain, Australia and virtually all members of the 27-nation European Union.

The declaratio­n does not target any nation. Garneau said it was designed to increase diplomatic pressure on countries that detain foreigners as well as others who might want to do so.

But a Canadian official said the initiative had been sparked by concern over arrests of foreigners by China, Iran, Russia and North Korea.

Even before the declaratio­n was formally released, the Global Times, a Chinese state-backed newspaper, cited unnamed experts as saying the initiative was “an aggressive and ill-considered attack designed to provoke China”.

Ottawa is locked in a dispute with Beijing, which detained two Canadians in 2018 after Vancouver police picked up a senior Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd executive on a U.S. warrant. Canada denounces what it calls “hostage diplomacy” while China insists the two cases are not linked.

Among the signatorie­s is the United States. Last week the State Department called for the release of the two Canadians and rejected China’s “use of coercion as a political tool”.

The Canadian official said the declaratio­n could help put pressure on Beijing.

“We want to make them feel a little uncomforta­ble.

We want them to know that a lot of countries think this practice is unacceptab­le and hopefully over time it does contribute to a change in behavior,” said the official, who requested anonymity given the sensitivit­y of the situation.

Last December the British parliament’s foreign affairs committee called on the government to declare Iran’s “arbitrary detention of foreign nationals” as hostage-taking.

British-Iranian aid worker Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe was arrested in 2016 and sentenced to five years after being convicted of plotting to overthrow Iran’s clerical establishm­ent.

The Canadian initiative was started last year by Francois-Philippe Champagne, Garneau’s predecesso­r. Champagne, now innovation minister, said by working together nations could better focus attention on the detainees.

“Their liberty may have been stolen but their voices won’t be silenced,” he said by phone.

 ??  ?? Richard Ratcliffe, husband of British-Iranian dual national Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, poses for a photograph after delivering a Mother’s Day card and flowers to the Iranian Embassy in London, England, March 31, 2019.
Richard Ratcliffe, husband of British-Iranian dual national Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, poses for a photograph after delivering a Mother’s Day card and flowers to the Iranian Embassy in London, England, March 31, 2019.

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