Toronto Star

PM blasts China over death penalty for Canadian

Beijing rejected Ottawa’s pleas several years ago in two other drug cases, the Star has learned

- TONDA MACCHARLES OTTAWA BUREAU

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemned a Chinese court’s decision Monday to sentence a Canadian to death on drug traffickin­g charges, but there is new reason to doubt that China will be persuaded to grant clemency.

The Star has learned that China previously dismissed clemency pleas by a former prime minister, Stephen Harper, and former governor general David Johnston against imposing the death penalty on Canadians in two cases.

A former Canadian ambassador to China, Guy Saint-Jacques, said in an interview he was personally involved in steps taken by the embassy and the Canadian government, including personally delivering a letter Harper wrote seeking to prevent the execution of two Canadians of Chinese origin.

Saint-Jacques recalls it occurred in late 2014 or early 2015, in separate drug traffickin­g cases in Guangdong province.

“I think what we just succeeded in doing was delay their execution by maybe one year.”

That’s cause for alarm as Canadian Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg faces execution by a Chinese justice system that had previously sentenced him to 15 years in jail on charges of smuggling 222 kilograms of crystal meth. A Chinese appeal court had ordered the sentence reviewed in late December, and after a oneday hearing the prosecutio­n request to toughen the sentence was granted. Schellenbe­rg, reported to have prior drug conviction­s in B.C., now has 10 days to file an appeal.

Saint-Jacques says the two Canadians previously executed in China were dual citizens. One had entered China on his Canadian passport, the other had travelled on a Chinese travel document. In the latter case, he said, China did not recognize the man’s dual citizenshi­p, and dealt with him as a Chinese citizen.

Harper took up their cases personally during a visit to China in a meeting with President Xi Jinping, who Saint-Jacques said told the Canadian leader China regards “drug traffickin­g as a very serious crime and they were following Chinese law.” Harper travelled to China in November 2014.

Harper’s letter was sent weeks after the visit, the day before the scheduled execution of one man, but was to no avail, said Saint-Jacques. He said Canadian officials were allowed one last consular visit, but the exe- cution eventually went ahead, with the second execution occurring within weeks as well, he said. Saint-Jacques could not recall the full names of either man, nor are there any records of such cases in English-language Canadian media.

Global Affairs Canada did not confirm details of SaintJacqu­es’ statements when first contacted but acknowledg­ed late Monday that executions did occur in roughly that time period. The Star was unable to independen­tly verify any other details.

The revelation was one of a number of alarming developmen­ts Monday. The Canadian government warned of new travel risks for Canadians.

Ottawa said while the risk level for travel to and within China was unchanged at “high,” it added a new warning: “We encourage Canadians to exercise a high degree of caution in China due to the risk of arbitrary enforcemen­t of local laws.”

Canada’s embassy in Beijing emailed Canadians registered in the country to be aware of the new risks, asking them to update the embassy if they leave China.

The Canadian government also made clear its concern over the fate of other Canadians now facing the Chinese justice system.

On Monday, the Chinese government formally dismissed Trudeau’s claim of diplomatic immunity for a Canadian former diplomat, Michael Kovrig, arrested by China last month.

Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Hua Chunying, said Kovrig “is not entitled to diplomatic immunity under the Vi- enna Convention on Diplomatic Relations by any measure.

“He is not currently a diplomat. Michael Kovrig used an ordinary passport and a business visa to come to China.”

Kovrig was on leave from Global Affairs Canada to work for a non-government­al peace advocacy group, the Internatio­nal Crisis Group. Arrested by China after Canada arrested a Huawei executive on Dec. 1, Kovrig faces vague allegation­s of engaging in activities that endangered Chinese state security. A second Canadian, businessma­n Michael Spavor, was arrested last month as well, and faces similar unspecifie­d charges. Trudeau reacted Monday with dismay to the latest developmen­ts in Schellenbe­rg’s case and tied it to his concern about China’s actions in the other cases.

“It is of extreme concern to us as a government as it should be to all our internatio­nal friends and allies that China has chosen to begin to arbitraril­y apply death penalty in cases facing – as in this case facing a Canadian.”

Trudeau told reporters he would seek clemency for Schellenbe­rg, speaking after he shuffled his cabinet Monday morning. As part of that shuffle, Trudeau moved his justice minister out of the portfolio responsibl­e for handling the U.S. extraditio­n request of Huawei executive of Meng Wanzhou, and installed a legal expert in comparativ­e and public law, David Lametti.

Canada’s Dec.1arrest of Meng, a Huawei chief financial officer, infuriated the Chinese government, which has accused Canada of acting arbitraril­y in the matter.

China dismissed Canada’s ex- planation that it was obliged to act under a bilateral extraditio­n treaty with the U.S., with its ambassador in Ottawa publicly accusing Canada’s government last week of double standards driven by “white supremacy.”

Chunying fired a shot at the Canadian government’s insistence that Trudeau is bound to respect the independen­ce of a Canadian court now seized with the Meng case.

“As to the Canadian side’s claim that all countries should respect judicial independen­ce, I believe this is quite right if only the Canadian side itself could first prove its judicial independen­ce with concrete actions.”

Saint-Jacques, who was Ottawa’s envoy from 2012 to 2016 and worked with Kovrig, said in an interview there is little doubt that with the men’s arrests and Schellenbe­rg’s suddenly toughened sentence, China “is sending a clear message” to Canada.

He said the government needs to “prepare a Plan A and a Plan B in case this further escalates because this problem is going to be with us for some time,” said St-Jacques. Saint-Jacques predicted Meng’s legal defence team will try to block the U.S. request and draw out the legal arguments for years, and he encouraged the Trudeau government to keep up the internatio­nal pressure because China cares about its internatio­nal reputation, even if it does not care about Canada.

Trudeau said Canada would continue to enlist the support of its internatio­nal friends and allies to object to China’s actions.

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg is seen in a photo released by a court in Dalian, China, where he was sentenced Monday to execution in a retrial on drug charges.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg is seen in a photo released by a court in Dalian, China, where he was sentenced Monday to execution in a retrial on drug charges.

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