Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trudeau halts extraditio­n treaty

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is suspending Canada’s extraditio­n treaty with Hong Kong, making it the first country to break law enforcemen­t links with the former British colony since China tightened its control over the territory.

Trudeau announced the measures at a press conference, joining allies in efforts to sanction China. Steps will include a ban on the export of sensitive military equipment to Hong Kong and a new travel advisory warning of the impacts of new security legislatio­n. Hong Kong has extraditio­n pacts with 30 countries and jurisdicti­ons around the world including the U.S., Europe and Australia.

“Canada is a firm believer in the one-country-two-system framework,” Trudeau told reporters near Ottawa, referring to the principle by which the Asian financial hub is overseen by Beijing.

“We will continue to support the many connection­s between Canada and Hong Kong, while also standing up for its people.”

Chinese President Xi Jinping signed a landmark national security law for Hong Kong earlier this week, that drew fresh retaliatio­n and condemnati­on from around the world. On Friday, Hong Kong filed its first charges under the new law while declaring illegal a key slogan chanted by hundreds of thousands of pro-democracy protesters over months of rallies.

Trudeau said Canada will look at additional measures in the coming days and weeks, including around immigratio­n. He didn’t give details. Hong Kong is home to about 300,000 Canadians.

“This process demonstrat­ed disregard for Hong Kong’s Basic Law,” Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said in a statement.

“Hong Kong’s role as a global hub was built on that foundation. Without it, Canada is forced to reassess existing arrangemen­ts.”

Canada currently has no extraditio­n treaty with China.

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