The Miracle

Chinese court jails Canadian for 11 years on spying charges

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Businessma­n Michael Spavor, who has been detained since December 2018, was found guilty by a court in Dandong . A court in China found Canadian businessma­n Michael Spavor guilty of spying on Wednesday, sentencing him to 11 years in prison, in a decision likely to further undermine already poor relations between China and Canada. Spavor, who for years ran a travel and cultural exchange business between China and North Korea, “was convicted of espionage and illegally providing state secrets”, Dandong city’s Intermedia­te People’s Court said in a statement. “He was sentenced to 11 years in prison.”

The court said Spavor, whose closed-door trial in March lasted little more than two hours, would also be deported but did not say when, and confiscate­d some of his personal property. Spavor is one of two Canadians who were detained in China in December 2018, shortly after Canada arrested Meng Wanzhou, the chief financial officer of Chinese telecoms giant Huawei, on an extraditio­n request by the United States. Michael Kovrig, an analyst with the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, also faces spying charges and was tried shortly after Spavor in March. He is still awaiting the verdict. Canada has said the detentions are linked to Meng’s case, which China has denied. “China’s conviction and sentencing of Michael Spavor is absolutely unacceptab­le and unjust,” Canadian Prime Minister Justin

Trudeau in a statement.

“The verdict for Mr. Spavor comes after more than two and a half years of arbitrary detention, a lack of transparen­cy in the legal process, and a trial that did not satisfy even the minimum standards required by internatio­nal law,” he said.

Canada’s ambassador to China Dominic Barton who visited Spavor at a detention centre in Dandong told reporters that the businessma­n had three messages he wanted to share with the outside world: “Thank you for all your support”, “I am in good spirits,” and “I want to get home.” Spavor and Kovrig have been held virtually incommunic­ado since they were first detained two and a half years ago. Limited consular visits were stopped because of the coronaviru­s and only resumed in October, and neither man has been able to see lawyers or their family. Meng, meanwhile, was granted bail and is living in one of her Vancouver mansions while her case goes through the courts. Source:.aljazeera.com

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