The Manila Times

Huawei exec’s extraditio­n fight enters final round in Canada

-

VANCOUVER: The high-stakes battle by Chinese Huawei Technologi­es executive Meng Wanzhou against extraditio­n to the United States enters its final stage in a Canadian court on Monday, after more than two years of legal skirmishes and diplomatic barbs.

The daughter of Huawei founder and chief executive Ren Zhengfei faces charges in the United States of bank fraud and conspiracy over the commercial activities of a former Huawei subsidiary alleged to have violated US sanctions against Iran.

As the case enters its final months, Meng’s defense lawyers are set to assert that abuses by Canada and the United States have denied her the right to a fair process.

The case has roiled Canada’s diplomatic relations with China, its second largest trading partner behind the United States.

Meng is accused of having lied to the HSBC investment bank about Huawei’s relationsh­ip with subsidiary Skycom, putting the bank at risk of violating US sanctions against Iran. If convicted, she could face more than 30 years in a US prison.

Meng and Huawei both deny the charges. Huawei is the world’s largest telecommun­ications equipment manufactur­er.

Two Canadian citizens — former diplomat Michael Kovrig and businessma­n Michael Spavor — remain imprisoned in China. They were detained days after Meng’s December 2018 arrest during a stopover in Vancouver, and after Beijing threatened Canada with severe consequenc­es over what Vice Foreign Minister Le Yucheng called Meng’s “unconscion­able” detention.

Ottawa has long maintained Kovrig and Spavor were “arbitraril­y” jailed in retaliatio­n for Meng’s arrest, while affirming the independen­ce of Canada’s judicial system in dealing with the US extraditio­n request.

Beijing, meanwhile, has called the charges against Meng “completely political,” and part of a plot to crush its top global technology firm. Washington last year banned US semiconduc­tor chipmakers from selling to Huawei, which it accuses of stealing American trade secrets.

‘Bartering chips’

The latest hearings begin just days after US President Joe Biden publicly demanded the two Canadians’ release, saying Tuesday during a virtual meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, “Human beings are not bartering chips.”

Ottawa recently unveiled a declaratio­n signed by 58 countries against “arbitrary detention in state-to-state relations.”

And when the Canadian parliament denounced China’s treatment of its ethnic Uighurs as genocide, Beijing angrily slammed it as a “malicious provocatio­n.”

“The Canadian side’s attempt to pressure China by using ‘Megaphone Diplomacy’ or ganging up is totally futile and will only head towards a dead end,” China’s embassy in Canada said.

In the upcoming hearings in the Supreme Court of British Columbia, Meng’s lawyers are expected to argue that former US president Donald Trump “poisoned” the case when he said he might intervene in her prosecutio­n in exchange for Chinese trade concession­s.

Lawyers for Canada’s attorney general have urged the judge to dismiss the allegation­s, saying in court filings that the remarks were made by “a president no longer in office, about a possible interventi­on in this case that never occurred.”

Defense lawyers will then argue that Meng’s rights were violated during her Vancouver airport detention and interrogat­ion; that the United States misled Canada when it requested her arrest; and that extraditin­g her would break internatio­nal law because none of Huawei’s alleged crimes had any direct connection to the United States.

Over the past two years, Meng has suffered several legal setbacks.

A judge last month rejected her plea to relax her bail conditions, which include a curfew, the wearing of a monitoring anklet, and daytime supervisio­n. Canada argued she might try to escape.

Meng remains under house arrest in her Vancouver mansion.

Her extraditio­n trial is scheduled to wrap up in mid-May, barring any appeals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines