Times Colonist

China-Canada division widens after judge’s decision on Meng

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — The bitter political divide between Canada and China grew ever wider Wednesday after a British Columbia judge issued a ruling that went against the stern demands of the People’s Republic.

China angrily denounced the decision by Justice Heather Holmes in the extraditio­n case of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou, who is wanted on fraud charges in the United States, as it called once more for her immediate release.

Canada held firm, calling for the release of its two “arbitraril­y detained” Canadian men, and said it would continue to respect the independen­ce of its judiciary from politics.

The upshot, said several analysts, is a deepening of a crisis in Sino-Canadian relations that would force the government to continue to seek allies in a dispute that has put Canada in the middle of a fight between two geopolitic­al giants.

Holmes ruled that the allegation­s against Meng, that she lied to American banks to get Huawei business around sanctions against Iran, could constitute a crime in Canada. So her extraditio­n case continues, and she will remain in the court’s hands — on bail in a luxury Vancouver home.

Michael Kovrig, an ex-diplomat working for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, and Michael Spavor, an entreprene­ur who did business in North Korea, have been in Chinese prisons with no access to lawyers or their families since they were arrested nine days after Meng’s arrest by the RCMP in December 2018.

A statement by the Chinese Embassy in Ottawa again called for Meng’s release and expressed “strong dissatisfa­ction” with Holmes’s ruling.

“The United States and Canada, by abusing their bilateral extraditio­n treaty and arbitraril­y taking forceful measures against Ms. Meng Wanzhou, gravely violated the lawful rights and interests of the said Chinese citizen,” the statement said.

“The purpose of the United States is to bring down Huawei and other Chinese high-tech companies, and Canada has been acting in the process as an accomplice of the United States. The whole case is entirely a grave political incident.”

Foreign Affairs Minister FrançoisPh­ilippe Champagne said the decision was but one step in an independen­t legal process, one that is “transparen­t” for Meng.

“The government of Canada’s top priority is and remains securing the release of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, who have been arbitraril­y detained for over 500 days,” the minister said in a statement.

Kovrig’s boss said he didn’t want China to subject Kovrig to repercussi­ons because the court ruling went against its wishes.

“I have no views on the ruling. That’s a decision of the Canadian court. It should have no bearing whatsoever on Michael Kovrig’s fate. He should not be made a casualty of the ruling in this case,” said Robert Malley, the head of the Washington­based Internatio­nal Crisis Group, in an interview.

“His fate should never have been connected to hers. He should not be a casualty of whatever’s happening between Canada, the United States and China,” Malley added.

“From our perspectiv­e and the perspectiv­e of Michael’s family, it’s way past time that he be released, and there should not be any implicatio­n, any consequenc­e from the court’s ruling on his fate.”

There are no easy answers for Canada as it moves forward with China but it needs to continue building internatio­nal support to help it along, said Wendy Dobson, an author and China expert who is codirector of the Institute for Internatio­nal Business at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management.

“They should focus on the difficulti­es and the tensions in the relationsh­ip but they should also, as these groups are developed, push back against the things we don’t agree with, like human-rights violations and the kind of political influence that has received a lot of attention in the Chinese-Australian relationsh­ip,” Dobson said in an interview.

Garnett Genuis, an Alberta MP and the Conservati­ve critic for Canada-China relations, said the rule of law is “foundation­al to our way of life” and he urged the Liberal government not to bend.

“It protects all of us. Unlike in the communist system in China, decisions like today’s are based on law, not on politics. All decisions made by the Liberal government going forward must be based on the rule of law and Canada’s internatio­nal obligation­s, and not based on politics,” Genuis told the Canadian Press in a written statement.

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