The Guardian (USA)

China: fourth Canadian citizen given death penalty over drugs charges

- Associated Press in Beijing

China has sentenced a fourth Canadian citizen to death on drug charges in less than two years following a sharp downturn in ties over the arrest of an executive of Chinese tech giant Huawei.

Ye Jianhui was sentenced on Friday by a court in the southern province of Guangdong. Ye had been found guilty of manufactur­ing and transporti­ng illegal drugs, the court said in a brief statement.

Another suspect in the case was also given the death penalty and four others sentenced to between seven years and life in prison, it said. Death sentences are automatica­lly referred to China’s highest court for review.

Ties between Canada and China have nosedived over Canada’s late 2018 arrest of Meng Wanzhou, a company executive and the daughter of Huawei’s founder, at the request of the US, which wants her extradited to face fraud charges over the company’s dealings with Iran. Her arrest enraged Beijing, which calls it a political move aimed at constraini­ng China’s rise as a global technology power.

Ye’s sentencing came a day after fellow Canadian, Xu Weihong, was given the death penalty by another court in Guandong province. Convicted Canadian drug smuggler Robert Schellenbe­rg was sentenced to death in a sudden retrial shortly after Meng’s arrest, and a Canadian citizen identified as Fan Wei was given the death penalty in April 2019 for his role in a multinatio­nal drug smuggling case.

China also detained the former Canadian diplomat Michael Kovrig and Canadian entreprene­ur Michael Spavor weeks after Meng’s arrest, accusing them of vague national security crimes. China has also placed restrictio­ns on various Canadian exports in an apparent attempt to pressure Canada into releasing Meng.

The court statement gave no further details of the charges against Ye and the others. However, the website of the Yangcheng Evening News based in the neighborin­g metropolis of Guangzhou said Ye and co-defendant Lu Hanchang conspired with others to manufactur­e and transport drugs between May 2015 and January 2016.

Police seized roughly 218kg of white crystals infused with the designer drug MDMA from a room used by the two, and found another 9.84g of the drug in bags and residences used by Lu and others, the newspaper said.

China, like many Asian nations, hands out harsh punishment­s for making and selling drugs, and the country’s rising wealth and transforma­tion into a center for world trade has attracted growing numbers of foreigners to its domestic market for illegal substances.

Asked on Friday about Ye’s sentencing, the Chinese foreign ministry spokesman, Wang Wenbin, said China “is a country under the rule of law and relevant judicial organs handle the case independen­tly in strict accordance with the law”.

Wang added that Meng’s detention was a “serious political incident“and again called for her release.

“Regarding China-Canada relations, China is not responsibl­e for the difficulti­es that the current China-Canada relationsh­ip is facing,” Wang said. “The Canadian side knows very well the crux of the problem.”

 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? Ties between Canada and China have worsened over Canada’s late 2018 arrest of Meng Wanzhou, a company executive and the daughter of Huawei’s founder, at the request of the US.
Photograph: Reuters Ties between Canada and China have worsened over Canada’s late 2018 arrest of Meng Wanzhou, a company executive and the daughter of Huawei’s founder, at the request of the US.

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