Times Colonist

Trump accused of ‘poisoning’ Meng case in B.C.

- TERRI THEODORE

VANCOUVER — New court documents accuse the United States president of “poisoning” the extraditio­n case against a Huawei executive being held in Canada.

An applicatio­n to B.C. Supreme Court by Meng Wanzhou’s lawyers says misconduct by Donald Trump and interferen­ce by other U.S. officials meet the clear standard to stay proceeding­s for abuse of process.

The documents say Trump has used Meng’s case to further his trade negotiatio­ns with China and that he intends to use her as a “bargaining chip” in the dispute, which is unrelated to the charges against her.

“By using Canada’s extraditio­n process to gain a strategic advantage in its dispute with China, the United States has undermined — and is underminin­g — the integrity of Canada’s judicial proceeding­s,” the documents say.

Trump has linked resolution of the U.S. government’s dealings with Huawei to a potential trade agreement with China. He has said he would consider Huawei’s role in a trade deal at the final stage of negotiatio­ns, the court applicatio­n says.

“This prior conduct shows the reasonable­ness of [Meng’s] fear that he will intervene in her case, and the merit of her submission that his comments have already poisoned the extraditio­n process.”

As long as Meng is the subject of an extraditio­n process in Canada, “she can continue to be used as a bargaining chip by the U.S.,” the document says.

Meng is being held on an U.S. extraditio­n request over allegation­s that she lied about Huawei’s relationsh­ip with a telecommun­ications company in Iran, violating American sanctions. Both she and Huawei deny the charges. Her arrest at Vancouver’s airport in December 2018 has prompted increasing tensions between Canada and China. The arrests and subsequent spying allegation­s against Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor in China are widely seen as an attempt to pressure Canada to release Meng. She is out on bail, living in her Vancouver home, while her legal team makes numerous applicatio­ns for her freedom.

In May, Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes dismissed the first phase of legal arguments by Meng’s lawyers, who claimed the case should be thrown out because the U.S. allegation­s against her wouldn’t be a crime in Canada.

The latest applicatio­n filed with the court says continuing the proceeding­s “would inevitably undermine respect for, and confidence in, Canada’s judicial process. It would appear to condone and ‘lend a stamp of approval’ to the requesting state’s intended misuse of the Canadian courts.”

The documents say Prime Minister Justin Trudeau aligned Meng’s case with Spavor and Kovrig by saying the United States shouldn’t sign a final trade deal with China until the question of Meng and the detained men has been settled.

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