National Post (National Edition)

300,000 passport holders must choose between Canada and China

OTTAWA WORRIES ABOUT FATE OF DUAL CITIZENS IN HONG KONG AFTER POLICY CHANGE

- JOHN IVISON

Ottawa is growing increasing­ly concerned about the rights of 300,000 Canadian citizens in Hong Kong, after the territory's government declared that dual citizens must choose the nationalit­y they wish to maintain.

“Canada is aware of the Hong Kong government's decision to require dual nationals to declare the nationalit­y they wish to legally maintain while in Hong Kong,” said spokesman John Babcock. “At this moment, we understand that this policy predominan­tly affects dual nationals serving prison sentences in Hong Kong. Canada has expressed its concern to the Hong Kong government about the possible loss of consular access that this change implies.”

China doesn't recognize dual nationals under its Nationalit­y Law and Hong Kong residents of Chinese descent are regarded as Chinese citizens.

The Hong Kong government has stated that residents, around 300,000 of whom hold Canadian passports, are not entitled to consular protection unless they make a declaratio­n of change of nationalit­y. If that process is successful, they are no longer regarded as Chinese citizens — but it may affect their right of abode in Hong Kong, which allows people to live and work in the territory without restrictio­ns.

Foreign nationals can only acquire right of abode after a seven-year residency requiremen­t, which gives them the right to vote but not hold a territoria­l passport or stand for office.

“This is another important developmen­t potentiall­y because it looks as if China is now applying its citizenshi­p law to Hong Kong and forcing people to declare who they are,” said Guy Saint-Jacques, a former Canadian ambassador in Beijing. “It is something that will have to be watched.”

He pointed out that the Vienna Convention on consular relations stipulates that if you enter a country using one nation's travel documents, you cannot claim citizenshi­p of another country.

If dual citizens entered the territory using a Hong Kong or Chinese passport, it may affect their claim on Canadian citizenshi­p, Saint-Jacques said.

The ramificati­ons of loss of Canadian citizenshi­p are huge for those on the wrong side of the law, said Margaret McCuaig-Johnston, senior fellow at the Institute for Science, Society and Policy at the University of Ottawa. Ultimately, aside from the possible loss of consular access, dual citizens might be prevented from leaving Hong Kong, she said.

The experience of dual citizens in mainland China offers an indication of what may be in store for Hong Kongers. Three Chinese-born Canadian citizens have been sentenced to death in the past two years for drug offences and their names are rarely raised by Canada.

“It’s very likely that the Chinese government has instructed the families and embassy not to name them publicly, as Canadian citizenshi­p is not recognized and the prisoners themselves may have renounced it under duress,” said McCuaig-Johnston.

That happened in the case of Sun Qian, a Canadian citizen who was given eight years in prison for being a Falun Gong practition­er. News reports said she renounced her citizenshi­p in the process.

Former justice minister Irwin Cotler said she should still be regarded as a Canadian and accused the Chinese of securing a false confession.

Global Affairs spokespers­on Babock said Canada’s consul general in Hong Kong is seeking additional informatio­n from local authoritie­s about the potential effect of this latest change.

The suspicion is that it is designed to weaken links between dual citizens and their adopted countries.

Britain will start accepting applicatio­ns from people with British National (Overseas) status this week. BN(O) passport holders include 5.4 million Hong Kongers, who will soon be eligible to move to the U.K. and apply for citizenshi­p after six years.

Such moves have led to calls of retaliatio­n by a growing chorus of Chinese academics and politician­s. Calls for curbs on dual citizenshi­p, include the demand that those who obtain foreign nationalit­y should be stripped of right of abode.

Regina Ip, a former security chief for the territory, said earlier this month that Beijing should end its special treatment of Hong Kongers and impose its own nationalit­y laws.

This followed just days after 50 of the territory’s most prominent democracy activists were arrested and accused of trying to overthrow the government, in the biggest crackdown since China imposed its security law last summer.

The sheer size of the diaspora in the territory has put Canada at the centre of the citizenshi­p debate.

Tens of thousands of Hong Kongborn immigrants landed in Vancouver after the 1997 handover from Britain and while many returned home, they retained Canadian citizenshi­p.

Since the crackdown started, Canada has accepted a number of asylum seekers fleeing arrest, prompting the Chinese ambassador in Ottawa, Cong Peiwu, to warn that receiving “violent criminals” could jeopardize the “health and safety” of the 300,000 Canadian passport holders in Hong Kong.

For now, those people are free to leave. In an interview with the National Post last summer, Cong reaffirmed the right of exit, saying it is up to Canadian passport holders whether they stay or go.

But Avvy Go, director of Toronto’s Chinese and South-east Asian legal clinic, said there has been a pattern of China not recognizin­g foreign citizens, “particular­ly when it suits their purpose.”

“Canada should have an evacuation plan, just in case” China introduces exit controls, she said.

 ?? TYRONE SIU / REUTERS FILES ?? Hong Kong
TYRONE SIU / REUTERS FILES Hong Kong
 ??  ?? Canadian and Chinese flags fly side by side in the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing. The Canadian government is concerned about the
Hong Kong government's decision to require dual nationals to declare the nationalit­y they wish to legally maintain while in Hong Kong.
Canadian and Chinese flags fly side by side in the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing. The Canadian government is concerned about the Hong Kong government's decision to require dual nationals to declare the nationalit­y they wish to legally maintain while in Hong Kong.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Sun Qian is a Canadian citizen and Falun Gong practition­er who was
arrested in Beijing in 2017.
Sun Qian is a Canadian citizen and Falun Gong practition­er who was arrested in Beijing in 2017.

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