National Post

Sajjan calls out China’s ‘hostage diplomacy’

Minister urges NATO to be vigilant

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • Canada’s defence minister described China’s continued detention of two Canadians as “hostage diplomacy” on Wednesday and urg- ed the NATO military alliance to keep tabs on the increasing­ly assertive Asian giant.

Harjit Sajjan made the comments during a wide-ranging panel discussion hosted by Slovakian think tank Globsec, nearly two years after Chinese authoritie­s first detained former diplomat Michael Kovrig and entreprene­ur Michael Spavor.

The two were arrested separately shortly after Canadian authoritie­s in Vancouver detained Meng Wanzhou, the chief financial officer of Chinese telecom giant Huawei, who is wanted in the United States on fraud charges.

Meng, who has denied any wrongdoing, is now facing possible extraditio­n to the U. S. while Chinese authoritie­s have indicted the detained Canadians on what many observers believe are trumped-up spying charges.

Sajjan raised the cases of Kovrig and Spavor, whose access to Canadian consular officials has been limited and who are reportedly being kept in cells where the lights are never turned off, in response to a question about the security threat posed by China.

“I would be remiss if I didn’t take this opportunit­y to talk about our two Canadians who have both been arbitraril­y detained in China,” he said during a panel discussion that also included his counterpar­ts from Slovakia and Latvia.

“This type of hostage diplomacy is not what good rules- based- order nations do. So if you want to be part of the global rules- based order, we need to have greater predictabi­lity. And these are the types of things that go against the norm.”

The minister went on to thank NATO allies for supporting Ottawa’s calls for Beijing to release the two Canadians. Their cases, along with the detention of Meng in Vancouver since December 2018, has become the focal point for relations between Canada and China.

While Sajjan suggested Canada and China continue to enjoy a strong relationsh­ip “when it comes to some aspects of our trade,” he cited Beijing’s actions in the South China Sea as one example where it poses a security challenge.

China has been greatly expanding its military presence and claims of territory in the South China Sea despite opposition from some of its neighbours as well as internatio­nal rulings against some of its claims.

“These are some of the things that we will continue to monitor, and we need to monitor in NATO,” Sajjan said.

“That’s why we always talk about NATO needs to look 360. This is not just about being reactionar­y to a problem. It’s about making sure any nation out there sees the collective will of what NATO brings to the table and that’s that strong message of defence and deterrence.”

These are some of the things that we will continue to monitor.

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