Calgary Herald

Chinese ambassador accuses Canada of racism

Lashes out at West’s ‘egotism, white supremacy’

- Mike Blanchfiel­d

• Canada and its Western allies’ calls for the release of two Canadians detained in China are rooted in white supremacy, the Chinese ambassador said in a published op-ed Wednesday.

Experts and analysts say the harsh language from the Chinese government’s representa­tive indicates the raw nerve that Canada has touched within the communist government with its efforts to recruit internatio­nal support for its detainees.

The U.S State Department has called for the release of Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, while Germany, France, Britain, the European Union and Australia have also issued supportive statements.

In an essay in the Hill Times, which covers Parliament and the federal government, Ambassador Lu Shaye questioned whether countries such as the U.S. and Britain are truly representa­tive of the internatio­nal community and he reiterated his government’s assertion that Western countries are employing a “double standard” in judging his country.

“The reason why some people are used to arrogantly adopting double standards is due to Western egotism and white supremacy,” Lu wrote. “What they have been doing is not showing respect for the rule of law, but mocking and trampling the rule of law.”

Kovrig, a Canadian diplomat on leave, and Spavor, an entreprene­ur, were arrested after Canada detained Chinese telecommun­ications executive Meng Wanzhou at the request of the United States, which wants her extradited to face fraud charges.

Conservati­ve MP Michael Cooper, who is travelling with a parliament­ary delegation of MPs and senators in China this week, said Lu’s remarks don’t warrant a response.

“I don’t think that there’s anything that can be said to that because it’s absurd,” Cooper said in a telephone interview from southern China.

In their meetings with Chinese officials, Cooper said, the delegation has been “emphasizin­g the facts” that differenti­ate the circumstan­ces faced by Meng in Canada and Kovrig and Spavor in China.

“The facts are: Ms. Meng was arrested pursuant to Canada’s obligation­s under its extraditio­n treaty with the United States. Ms. Meng’s rights have been protected. She’s been provided bail. She has access to consular services. She has access to a lawyer,” said Cooper. “By contrast, the situation involving Mr. Spavor and Mr. Kovrig is exactly the opposite of that.”

Meng has had a bail hearing in open court and has been released on conditions, while neither Kovrig nor Spavor has been formally charged or had access to lawyers.

The Chinese Embassy in Ottawa did not reply to a request for comment, and has repeatedly refused interview requests from The Canadian Press in recent weeks.

Last month, the Globe and Mail also published an op-ed from Lu in which he called Meng’s arrest in Canada “a miscarriag­e of justice” that has “chilled” the feelings of the Chinese people towards Canada. Lu wrote that Canada was complicit in a U.S. “witch hunt.”

“The ambassador will have been instructed to reply, which is a sign that the criticism China is receiving is beginning to strike home,” said David Mulroney, who was the Canadian ambassador to China between 2009 and 2012. “He sort of throws a whole bunch of things at the wall in the hope that something will stick.”

But the Chinese have upped the rhetorical ante considerab­ly by invoking western egotism and white supremacy, said Fen Hampson, the head of the globalsecu­rity program at the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation in Waterloo, Ont.

“They are underminin­g their own position — or to paraphrase Queen Gertrude in Hamlet, ‘the Chinese doth protest too much, methinks,’ ” said Hampson. “The Chinese will invariably complain about double standards, but when it comes to the rule of law and human rights it is abundantly clear that they have one standard and Western democracie­s have another.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland has said Canada has followed the rule of law in arresting Meng because of its extraditio­n law with the U.S. She and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau have stressed that the arrest of Meng was a legal matter that was divorced from politics.

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