Toronto Star

Minister is indebted to China, Scheer says

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA— Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer wants Foreign Affairs Minister François-Philippe Champagne to explain how his holding two mortgages with a Chinese bank doesn’t compromise his ability to deal with the People’s Republic.

Scheer wants Champagne to appear before the special House of Commons committee on Canada-China relations and he says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau needs to justify the cabinet appointmen­t there, too.

Scheer says Champagne is Canada’s top diplomat and China’s communist leaders can use the $1.2 million he owes on two London properties to the Bank of China as leverage at a time of strained relations.

Scheer pointed to the ongoing dispute that has seen two Canadian men arbitraril­y detained by China since December 2018 and the fact Canada is dependent on Chinese supplies of personal protective equipment for COVID-19.

Scheer says some of those Chinese imports have included millions of defective masks that were of no use to front-line health workers.

Scheer is dismissing Liberal government rebuttals that Champagne disclosed the situation to the ethics commission­er and the informatio­n is posted publicly.

“But the minister’s latest disclosure was only made on June 4, just a few days ago,” Scheer told a press conference on Friday.

“So did the minister disclose both mortgages when he was elected in 2015 or not?”

Scheer said Canadians may bank all over the world, “but there’s a big difference between a Canadian having a mortgage at a Chinese bank and Canada’s most senior diplomat being indebted to the PRC.”

Scheer said China’s Communist Party uses leverage to expand its influence.

“Owing someone over a million dollars — that’s pretty big leverage.”

Relations between Canada and China have been severely strained since the RCMP arrested Chinese high-tech scion Meng Wanzhou on an American extraditio­n warrant in December 2018.

China arrested Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor nine days later in what is widely viewed as retaliatio­n and has levelled accusation­s of spying against them.

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