Medicine Hat News

Help for Canadians in Hong Kong announced, as committee says Uighurs face ‘genocide’

School’s out forever

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA

The federal government announced long-awaited plans Thursday to help Canadians living in Hong Kong amid the Chinese clampdown on democracy in the territory.

Immigratio­n Minister

Marco Mendicino said Canada is creating a new measure targeting students and young people in Hong Kong: a work permit designed to help them get permanent Canadian residency faster.

Mendicino said Canadian citizens and permanent residents living in the territory can return to Canada at any time and Ottawa will expedite any documents they need. The initiative could also bring in more people to bolster Canada’s health-care sector as it fights a second wave of COVID-19, he added.

This announceme­nt was part of Canada’s response to the Chinese government’s imposition in June of a new national-security law in Hong Kong that is widely seen as eroding democratic protection­s there.

“Canada remains deeply concerned about China’s passage of the new national-security law. We have unequivoca­lly stated that this legislatio­n and the unilateral powers within it are in direct conflict with China’s internatio­nal obligation­s and undermine the ‘one country, two systems’ framework,” said Mendicino.

Hong Kong was supposed to operate under that framework after Britain handed its former colony over to Beijing in 1997 under an internatio­nal agreement. But human-rights and democracy advocates say Beijing’s new national-security law is underminin­g freedom in Hong Kong.

The British charity Hong Kong Watch applauded the Canadian initiative, saying one of its top officials, Lord Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong, broached the subject in a letter to Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne this past summer.

“I would like to put on record our wholeheart­ed support for such a scheme, which would reiterate the Canadian government’s long record of defending human rights, democracy, and the rule of law,” says Patten’s letter.

Mendicino echoed Wednesday’s statement by Champagne that expressed Canada’s deep disappoint­ment in China’s latest decision to expel four elected lawmakers from office.

“Actions such as these demonstrat­e a clear disregard for the Basic Law and are having the consequent­ial effect of eroding human rights in Hong Kong,” said Mendicino.

Thursday’s developmen­ts are sure to anger China, which has warned the Trudeau government not to intervene in Hong Kong, and to butt out on levelling criticism related to Uighurs.

Earlier Thursday, members of the House of Commons committee looking into the plight of ethnic Muslim Uighurs in China’s Xinjiang province were unequivoca­l in levelling an accusation of genocide against China’s ruling Communist party.

China’s ambassador to Canada, Cong Peiwu, has rejected the accusation­s of wrongdoing by his government in Xinjiang, and warned Canada not to help pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong, using language that was viewed as a threat to Canadian passport holders in the territory.

“The prime minister said that those comments by the Chinese ambassador were unacceptab­le,” said Mendicino.

Canada’s relations with China are at an all-time low because the People’s Republic has imprisoned two Canadian men, Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, in what the Trudeau government has branded as coercive or hostage diplomacy.

Kovrig and Spavor were rounded up by Chinese authoritie­s in December 2018, nine days after Canada arrested Chinese high-tech scion Meng Wanzhou on a U.S. extraditio­n warrant.

Mendicino said the government remains concerned about the plight of the Uighurs.

The panel rendered its genocide finding after hearing harrowing testimony from survivors of China’s imprisonme­nt of Uighur Muslims. They shared accounts of their mass incarcerat­ion, rape and forced sterilizat­ion of women, and mass surveillan­ce.

Critics say China has detained as many as a million Uighurs and members of other Muslim groups in what amount to mass prisons, where they can be re-educated.

“The subcommitt­ee is persuaded that the actions of the Chinese Communist Party constitute genocide, as laid out in the Genocide Convention,” said Liberal MP Peter Fonseca, the committee chair.

 ?? NEWS PHOTO MO CRANKER ?? Central Park School demolition work took place Wednesday. The public school board voted to close the school in 2010 due to financial reasons.
NEWS PHOTO MO CRANKER Central Park School demolition work took place Wednesday. The public school board voted to close the school in 2010 due to financial reasons.
 ?? CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK ?? Minister of Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Marco Mendicino holds a press conference in Ottawa on Thursday.
CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK Minister of Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Marco Mendicino holds a press conference in Ottawa on Thursday.

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