Times Colonist

Media asks court to approve broadcasti­ng of Huawei executive’s extraditio­n hearings

- AMY SMART

VANCOUVER — A media consortium is asking the British Columbia Supreme Court to allow video and web broadcasti­ng of the extraditio­n hearings of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou, arguing there’s significan­t public interest in the case.

Daniel Coles, a lawyer who represents 13 domestic and internatio­nal media outlets including the Canadian Press, told Justice Heather Holmes on Wednesday that broadcasti­ng the proceeding­s would “engage with the very meaning of open and accessible justice in the modern era.”

Lawyers for Meng and Canada’s attorney general are opposing the request, but have not yet presented their arguments.

Meng, Huawei’s chief financial officer, is free on bail and living in one of her homes in Vancouver while awaiting the extraditio­n hearing. She was detained by border officials at Vancouver’s airport last December, then arrested by the RCMP at the request of the United States, which is seeking her extraditio­n on fraud charges.

Meng is fighting the order and has denied any wrongdoing. Her lawyers argue her arrest and detention were unlawful.

Coles said comments by Canadian, American and Chinese politician­s and diplomats show the case has been politicize­d. “Depending on what happens in this case, there are political ramificati­ons,” Coles said.

The court’s public gallery is often full, he said, and many members of the public have an interest in the case but are unable to watch it unfold in the courtroom because they don’t live in Vancouver or are tied up with jobs and other obligation­s.

They range from canola farmers affected by Chinese sanctions to the friends of the families of two Canadians detained by China, decisions widely seen as retaliatio­n against Canada for Meng’s arrest. Broadcasti­ng the proceeding­s would give them access to the court, unfiltered by a reporter’s observatio­ns, he said.

In an affidavit, Treena Wood, news director at CBC Vancouver, makes the argument for access.

“The ability to view a livestream would effectivel­y remove the reporter/broadcaste­r filter because the viewer’s experience would be akin to sitting in a courtroom,” the affidavit says.

And in cases where clips are used in news broadcasts, which would inevitably involve editorial selection, viewers would at least be afforded a more direct experience of the court, she says.

A series of hearings in the case is set to begin in January and Coles is requesting authorizat­ion for the first one, or portions of it, to be broadcast. He also wants to apply again for access to more hearings next year.

Court rules give discretion to a judge to authorize video recording or broadcasti­ng but do not provide a legal framework for making that decision, Coles said.

He urged Holmes to consider the principles set out by a Supreme Court of Canada decision known as Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasti­ng Corp. While that case addressed publicatio­n bans, it has been used several time as a broader test for assessing press freedom in judicial proceeding­s, he added.

Coles argued the Meng case passes the test, because broadcasti­ng proceeding­s poses no “real and substantia­l risk” to the administra­tion of justice. The courts have also demonstrat­ed an interested in increasing accessibil­ity, he said, mentioning a pilot project of the B.C. Court of Appeal to webcast select proceeding­s.

 ??  ?? Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou is out on bail and remains under partial house arrest in Vancouver.
Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou is out on bail and remains under partial house arrest in Vancouver.

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