Oman Daily Observer

China suspects detained Canadian of spying

DIPLOMATIC ROW: New allegation­s come three days after Canada launched extraditio­n process against Meng, angering Beijing

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BEIJING: China suspects detained former Canadian diplomat Michael Kovrig of spying and stealing state secrets, state media reported on Monday, turning up the heat in a diplomatic row between Beijing and Ottawa as a top Huawei executive faces possible extraditio­n.

Another Canadian in Chinese detention — businessma­n Michael Spavor — was one of Kovrig’s main sources of intelligen­ce, the official Xinhua news agency reported, citing authoritie­s.

The pair were detained in December in what observers see as retaliatio­n just days after Canada arrested Chinese telecom giant Huawei’s chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, at the request of the United States.

Chinese authoritie­s had previously said the two Canadian men were under investigat­ion on suspicion of endangerin­g national security. Spying charges could expose them to tough prison sentences.

Kovrig, who now works for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group thinktank, had often entered China using a non-diplomatic passport and business visas and has been gathering intelligen­ce since 2017, Xinhua said.

The new allegation­s come three days after Canada launched the extraditio­n process against Meng, angering Beijing, which called the action a “severe political incident.”

Meng will be in court in Vancouver on Wednesday to schedule a date for her extraditio­n hearing.

The United States wants to put her on trial on fraud charges for alleged Iran sanctions-busting and lying to US banks about it.

Ottawa has said the two Canadian citizens were “arbitraril­y” detained and that interrogat­ions of Kovrig breached the Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations — allegation­s Beijing flatly rejected.

A group of Canadian parliament­arians had earlier complained to Chinese authoritie­s that Kovrig and Spavor have been denied access to lawyers, and remain in “completely unacceptab­le” detention conditions.

“China’s approach is no different from the rest of the world in dealing with such cases involving national security cases,” foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said at a regular briefing on Monday.

China will handle their case in “strict accordance with the law, guarantee the legitimate rights of Kovrig and Spavor,” and arrange for consular visits, a report by a Communist Party organ overseeing state and public security said in a report on a news website it operates.

Meanwhile, Meng, 47, has filed suit against Canadian authoritie­s for violating her constituti­onal rights when she was detained at Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport.

Her lawyers charge impropriet­y in the conditions under which Meng was interrogat­ed for three hours by the customs officers, officially as part of a routine inspection, before being served with her arrest. During those three hours, the customs officers searched her phones and computers as well as her luggage, in violation of her rights, the lawyers said.

The US Justice Department accuses Huawei and its chief financial officer of circumvent­ing US sanctions against Iran, but also, via two affiliates, stealing trade secrets from US telecommun­ications group T-mobile.

 ??  ?? Michael Kovrig
Michael Kovrig

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