The Telegram (St. John's)

Canada has final say

Justice minister will decide whether to extradite Huawei executive to U.S.

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Canada’s justice minister will have the final say on whether to send a Chinese business executive to face fraud charges in the United States, she said Wednesday.

That could make Canada’s spot between two economic superpower­s even more difficult.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s musing about interferin­g in the case of Huawei’s chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou is fuelling Beijing conspiracy theories about Canada’s true intent behind detaining the company’s top executive.

Canada has maintained that the rule of law is separate from politics, that the case against Meng will be judged fairly and independen­tly.

But if a court says someone should be extradited to faces charges in another country, the ultimate decision is up to a politician.

Justice Minister Jody Wilsonrayb­ould said Wednesday that she takes her “extraditio­n responsibi­lities and obligation­s very seriously,” and if Canada’s courts approve Meng’s extraditio­n, “then as the minister of justice, I will ultimately have to decide on the issue of surrender of the person sought for extraditio­n.”

Therefore, Wilson-raybould said in a statement, she wouldn’t say any more because that “would risk underminin­g both the independen­ce of the court proceeding­s and the proper functionin­g of Canada’s extraditio­n process.”

“In order to safeguard due process and to respect the independen­ce of the courts, it is essential that the Crown’s position in this matter, as in all court proceeding­s, be presented in the courtroom where it can be properly considered,” she said.

But Trump complicate­d that position — one his own ambassador to Canada also advocated on Tuesday morning - when he told Reuters Tuesday evening he would “certainly intervene if I thought it was necessary” in Meng’s case, if it would help him forge a trade deal with China.

China’s state-run media was already ridiculing Canada’s assertion that Meng would be dealt with fairly and transparen­tly by an independen­t judiciary, the same view U.S. Ambassador Kelly Craft put forward.

Roland Paris, who was Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s first foreign-policy adviser, said Canada has for decades enjoyed the luxury of operating in “a very comfortabl­e internatio­nal context” but not any more.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? People hold a sign at a B.C. courthouse prior to the bail hearing for Meng Wanzhou, Huawei’s chief financial officer on Monday.
CP PHOTO People hold a sign at a B.C. courthouse prior to the bail hearing for Meng Wanzhou, Huawei’s chief financial officer on Monday.

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