The Star Malaysia

Appeal hearing held for Canadian on death row

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BEIJING: A Chinese court held an appeal hearing for a Canadian who was sentenced to death for drug smuggling in a case that has deepened a diplomatic rift between the two countries.

The intermedia­te court in Liaoning province said Robert Schellenbe­rg’s sentence would be announced at an unspecifie­d date.

Convicted of playing a central role in a methamphet­amine smuggling operation, Schellenbe­rg was initially sentenced to 15 years in November, only to be handed the death sentence at a hastily-scheduled January retrial.

That came after Canada arrested Meng Wanzhou, chief financial officer of Chinese telecom giant Huawei, on a US extraditio­n warrant in December. Days later, two Canadians – Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor – were detained in China in apparent retaliatio­n.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemned Schellenbe­rg’s sentencing in January and accused China of “arbitraril­y” applying the death penalty.

Schellenbe­rg, who was arrested in 2014, maintains his innocence.

More than 200kg of methamphet­amine were seized as part of Schellenbe­rg’s case, the court said. It called the 36-year-old Canadian the “principal offender” and said the evidence presented was “true and sufficient”.

Canadian Embassy officials were notified and Schellenbe­rg’s litigation rights were lawfully protected during yesterday’s proceeding­s, the court added.

“Both sides debated what each believes to be the issues in the case,” Zhang said, adding that at this stage he cannot assess what the final judgment will be.

The appeal hearing followed Meng’s court appearance on Wednesday in Vancouver.

Meng is accused of lying to banks about the company’s dealings with Iran in violation of US trade sanctions. Her attorney, Scott Fenton, has argued that comments by US President Donald Trump suggest the case against her is politicall­y motivated.

Washington has pressured other countries to limit use of Huawei’s technology, warning they could be opening themselves up to surveillan­ce and theft of informatio­n.

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