San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Canadians, Chinese exec back home in swap

- By Rob Gillies

TORONTO — China, the U.S. and Canada completed a high-stakes prisoner swap with joyous homecoming­s for two Canadians held by China and for an executive of Chinese global communicat­ions giant Huawei Technologi­es charged with fraud, potentiall­y bringing closure to a 3-year feud that embroiled the three countries.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hugged diplomat Michael Kovrig and entreprene­ur Michael Spavor on the tarmac after they landed in Calgary, Alberta, early Saturday. The men were detained in China in Dec. 2018, shortly after Canada arrested Meng Wanzhou, Huawei Technologi­es’ chief financial officer and the daughter of the company’s founder, on a U.S. extraditio­n request.

Many countries labeled China’s action “hostage politics,” while China accused Ottawa of arbitrary detention. The two Canadians

were jailed for more than 1,000 days.

“It’s fantastic to be back home in Canada and I am immensely grateful to everybody who worked hard to bring both of us back home,” a noticeably thinner Kovrig said after a Canadian government plane landed in Toronto and he was greeted by his wife and sister.

“I’m feeling fantastic,” Kovrig said.

Meng’s return to China later Saturday was carried live on state TV, underscori­ng the degree to which Beijing has linked her case with Chinese nationalis­m and its rise as a global economic and political power.

Wearing a red dress matching the color of China’s flag, Meng thanked the ruling Communist Party and its leader Xi Jinping for supporting her through more than 1,000 days in house arrest in Vancouver, where she owns two multimilli­on dollar mansions.

“I have finally returned to the warm embrace of the motherland,” Meng said. “As an ordinary Chinese citizen going through this difficult time, I always felt the warmth and concern of the party, the nation and the people.”

The chain of events involving the global powers brought an abrupt end to legal and geopolitic­al wrangling that has roiled relations between Washington, Beijing and Ottawa. The three-way deal enabled China and Canada to each bring home their own detained citizens while the U.S. wrapped up a criminal case against Meng that for months had been mired in an extraditio­n fight.

The first activity came Friday afternoon when Meng, 49, reached an agreement with federal prosecutor­s that called for fraud charges against her to be dismissed next year and allowed for her to return to China immediatel­y. As part of the deal, known as a deferred prosecutio­n agreement, she accepted responsibi­lity for misreprese­nting the company’s business dealings in Iran.

As part of the deal with Meng, the Justice Department agreed to dismiss the fraud charges against her in December 2022 — exactly four years after her arrest — provided that she complies with certain conditions, including not contesting any of the government’s factual allegation­s. The Justice Department also agreed to drop its request that Meng be extradited to the U.S., which she had vigorously challenged.

After appearing via videoconfe­rence for her New York hearing, Meng made a brief court appearance in Vancouver, where she’d been out on bail living in a multimilli­on-dollar mansion while the two Canadians were held in Chinese prison cells where the lights were kept on 24 hours a day.

Huawei is the biggest global supplier of network gear for phone and internet companies. It has been a symbol of China’s progress in becoming a technologi­cal world power — and a subject of U.S. security and law enforcemen­t concerns. Some analysts say Chinese companies have flouted internatio­nal rules and norms and stolen technology.

The case against Meng stems from a January 2019 indictment from the Trump administra­tion Justice Department that accused Huawei of stealing trade secrets and using a Hong Kong shell company called Skycom to sell equipment to Iran in violation of U.S. sanctions. The indictment also charged Meng herself with committing fraud by misleading the HSBC bank about the company’s business dealings in Iran.

 ?? Jeff McIntosh / Canadian Press via AP ?? “I’m feeling fantastic,” said diplomat Michael Kovrig, shown embracing his wife, left, and sister.
Jeff McIntosh / Canadian Press via AP “I’m feeling fantastic,” said diplomat Michael Kovrig, shown embracing his wife, left, and sister.

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