The Borneo Post

Huawei exec asks Canada to quash US extraditio­n request

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OTTAWA: Lawyers for a senior executive at Chinese tech giant Huawei asked Canada’s justice minister on Monday to quash extraditio­n proceeding­s against Meng Wanzhou and for her to be released.

The court proceeding­s are scheduled to start on Jan 20. Meng is currently out on bail.

The US wants to put Meng on trial for fraud for allegedly violating Iran sanctions and lying about it to US banks — accusation­s that her lawyers dispute.

A copy of the letter to Justice Minister David Lametti was not made public.

But in a press release announcing the letter Meng’s lawyers urged Lametti to ‘withdraw the proceeding­s because the extraditio­n proceeding­s are without merit and cessation of the proceeding­s would be in the best interests of Canada’s national interests’.

They argue that the case is ‘palpably’ political and ‘ simply extraordin­ary’ from legal, jurisdicti­onal and foreign policy perspectiv­es.

“In our view, Canada is at cross-roads respecting the US’ request that Canada extradite Ms Meng, for conduct that could not be an offence in Canada and which is at odds with Canadian values and establishe­d foreign policy regarding Iran,” they said.

Under Canadian law, the justice minister can intervene in extraditio­n cases.

Canada’s relations with China have soured over Meng’s arrest on a US warrant in December 2018 during a flight stopover in Vancouver.

In a move widely seen as retaliatio­n and described by some observers as ‘hostage diplomacy’, Beijing detained two Canadians — former diplomat Michael Kovrig and businessma­n Michael Spavor — and blocked Canadian agricultur­al shipments worth billions of dollars.

It later accused Kovrig of espionage and alleged that Spavor provided him with intelligen­ce.

Former Canadian prime minister Jean Chretien recently urged Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to reject the US extraditio­n request and cancel the case.

Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland disagreed.

“It would set a very dangerous precedent for Canada to alter its behavior when it comes to honouring an extraditio­n treaty in response to external pressure,” she said.

Lametti’s office said it would be “inappropri­ate” to comment while Meng’s case is before the courts.

 ?? Photo — Reuters file ?? A Huawei company logo is seen at the company headquarte­rs in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China.
Photo — Reuters file A Huawei company logo is seen at the company headquarte­rs in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China.
 ??  ?? Meng Wanzhou
Meng Wanzhou

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