Waterloo Region Record

Senate to focus on Tibetan prisoners

- Mike Blanchfiel­d

OTTAWA — With Prime Minister Justin Trudeau poised to possibly travel to China soon, a Conservati­ve senator plans to shine a spotlight on human rights abuses in its Himalayan region of Tibet.

Sen. Dennis Patterson plans to use the procedural rules of the upper chamber to draw attention to what he says are human rights abuses in Tibet, which has been under the Chinese Communist Party’s control since 1951.

Patterson said he and fellow senators will read the biographie­s of more than half a dozen political prisoners held in Tibet.

“It’s a message to the government there are important human rights issues not to be ignored in engagement with China,” Patterson said in an interview.

The prime minister of Tibet’s government-in-exile says Canada ought to tread cautiously as it pursues deeper economic ties with China, including a possible free trade deal.

“You should not give a free pass for human rights, for basic values of Canada. You can’t compromise on that,” said Lobsang Sangay, who became the head of the government-in-exile in 2011 replacing the Dalai Lama, who is now solely focused on being the Tibetan spiritual leader.

The Liberal government has yet to decide if it will purse formal free trade negotiatio­ns with China, but has recently completed a round of public consultati­ons.

Trudeau is reportedly considerin­g a trip to China in the coming weeks to pursue the government’s agenda of diversifyi­ng trading and investment opportunit­ies to Asia.

China doesn’t recognize the Dalai Lama or his government­in-exile and considers him a dangerous separatist.

It also does not take kindly to foreign government­s giving attention to the Tibet issue. That includes meeting the Dalai Lama or his political leaders.

Human rights aside, Canada needs to ask itself whether it makes business sense to pursue free trade with China, Sangay said in an interview in Ottawa this week.

“China will not buy more goods from Canada just because there is an agreement,” he said.

“If it’s not a good deal, they won’t buy.”

Similar concerns were expressed in the recently released federal report on the consultati­ons with more than 600 businesses, academics and civil society groups.

It said a pact with China could kill Canadian jobs and reduce the ability to compete against lax labour standards, lower environmen­tal requiremen­ts and Chinese state subsidies.

Canada and China establishe­d a high-level political dialogue that calls for yearly visits between leaders and Trudeau’s turn is coming up.

But the two countries disagree on the role of human rights in the talks: Canada says they are linked but China maintains the issue should be divorced from trade agreements.

Patterson said the Senate discussion will be handled with tact and sensitivit­y.

“I’m confident that the tone of discussion will be respectful and it will not be provocativ­e,” said Patterson.

Patterson said after meeting Tibetan Canadians earlier this year he was struck by what he saw as the similar threats to culture faced by Tibetans and Canada’s Inuit community, which he represents.

“We’re struggling in Nunavut with the preservati­on of language as a carrier of Inuit culture,” said Patterson.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Senator Dennis Patterson plans to highlight human rights abuses in Tibet.
SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS Senator Dennis Patterson plans to highlight human rights abuses in Tibet.

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