The Peterborough Examiner

China warns against granting asylum to Hong Kong protesters

Envoy says ‘interferen­ce’ will embolden ‘criminals’

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — The Chinese ambassador to Canada warned the Trudeau g overnment on Thursday not to grant asylum to Hong Kong residents fleeing a widely criticized national security law imposed by Beijing.

“We strongly urge the Canadian side not (to) grant so-called political asylum to those violent criminals in Hong Kong,” Ambassador Cong Peiwu said Thursday in a video news conference from the Chinese Embassy in Ottawa.

He said that amounted to “interferen­ce in China’s domestic affairs, and certainly, it will embolden those violent criminals.”

Hong Kong was supposed to operate under a “one country, two systems” deal after Britain handed its former colony over to Beijing in 1997 under an internatio­nal agreement. But human rights and pro-democracy advocates say Beijing’s new national security law is underminin­g freedom in what is known as the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region.

“So, if the Canadian side really cares about the stability and the prosperity in Hong Kong, and really cares about the good health and safety of those 300,000 Canadian passport holders in Hong Kong, and the large number of Canadian companies operating in Hong Kong SAR, you should support those efforts to fight violent crimes,” Cong said.

Cong also flatly rejected Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s assertion that China is engaging in coercive diplomacy by imprisonin­g two Canadian men in retaliatio­n for the arrest of a Chinese high-tech executive on an American extraditio­n warrant. Meng Wanzhou is living under house arrest in Vancouver while her case wends through a British Columbia court.

In December 2018, China imprisoned Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor and charged them with underminin­g the country ’s national security. Cong said they are still undergoing a legal process in China, but he did not provide further details. He reiterated his government’s long-held demand that Canada release Meng immediatel­y, but he said her case and his government’s prosecutio­n of Kovrig and Spavor are not linked. Cong said Canada’s efforts to get other countries to join its fight for Kovrig and Spavor is “doomed to fail.”

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