The Borneo Post

Canadian faces retrial in China drug case next week

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BEIJING: A Canadian man who was sentenced to 15 years in prison for drug smuggling in China will face a retrial on Monday, which could hand him a harsher sentence and further strain ties between Beijing and Ottawa.

In a statement posted on its website, the northeaste­rn Dalian Intermedia­te People’s Court said yesterday that Robert Lloyd Schellenbe­rg’s new trial is scheduled for 8am on Jan 14, but gave no further details.

China exercises a zero-tolerance policy towards drug traffickin­g, and has handed death sentences to foreigners found guilty of smuggling large quantities of illicit drugs.

The case comes as Beijing and Ottawa remain embroiled in a diplomatic row triggered by Canada’s Dec 1 arrest of a senior executive from Chinese telecommun­ications giant Huawei wanted in the United States.

In what observers see as an act of retaliatio­n, China later detained two Canadians – a former diplomat and a business consultant – on suspicion of engaging in activities that ‘endanger’ national security.

In a previous ruling in November, Schellenbe­rg was sentenced to 15 years in prison and a 150,000 yuan ( US$ 22,000) forfeiture.

The high court in northeaste­rn Liaoning province, which presided over Schellenbe­rg’s appeal attempt last December, called the sentencing ‘obviously inappropri­ate’ given the severity of his crimes.

Schellenbe­rg played ‘an important role’ in drug smuggling and was potentiall­y involved in internatio­nal organised drug traffickin­g activities, it said.

Other foreigners have been executed for such crimes.

In 2014, a Japanese national sentenced in Dalian city in northeaste­rn Liaoning province was put to death for drug offences, according to Tokyo diplomats and media reports.

China also sentenced a Filipina drug trafficker to death in 2013, according to the Philippine foreign department, ignoring Manila’s request to spare her life. — AFP

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