Toronto Star

Harper meets with Chinese official linked to religious repression

- LEE-ANNE GOODMAN THE CANADIAN PRESS

HANGZHOU, CHINA— Prime Minister Stephen Harper discussed business ties on Friday with a Chinese official accused of ordering the widespread demolition of Christian churches in his province.

Christians in the industrial boomtown of Hangzhou say decrees enforced by Xia Baolong, the Communist party secretary for the coastal Zhejiang province, have resulted in the destructio­n of hundreds of crosses and churches in the region over the past few months.

Police showed up in August at a church in downtown Hangzhou and took down the cross, saying it violated height restrictio­ns. Congregati­on members vehemently denied that was the case.

Earlier this year, authoritie­s in Zhejiang reportedly issued demolition notices to more than 100 churches, saying they violated zoning regulation­s. In April, the majestic Sanjiang church in Wenzhou was razed. In other parts of the province, officials have used cranes and blowtorche­s to remove crosses from church exteriors.

Churchgoer­s in the nearby city of Taizhou squared off with as many as 4,000 police officers in an attempt to stop officials from removing two crosses from a church. The New York Times reported that as many as 40 people were detained.

“Even if it’s illegal constructi­on, it should have been taken away by city administra­tion officials, not by the police,” churchgoer Xiao Dihua said Friday of the removal of the cross in Hangzhao.

Another parishione­r suggested the removal of the cross made it difficult for her to worship.

“Without a cross, it’s very hard to face God,” said the woman who would identify herself only as Zhu.

“How can you have a church without a cross? We have a cross in our hearts.”

Harper met Xia at the state guesthouse, an elegant lakeside building surrounded by lush willows and cedars. The two discussed strengthen­ing Canada-China business ties.

A spokesman for the prime minister said religious freedom was discussed, but didn’t say whether the churches were specifical­ly mentioned.

The Prime Minister’s Office says Harper plans to raise China’s human rights record when he meets the country’s president in Beijing over the weekend.

The Conservati­ve government has frequently criticized China for its treatment of Christians. Christiani­ty is one of China’s fastest-growing faiths. There are now an estimated 100 million Christians in China compared with 86.7 million Communist party members.

The prime minister’s latest visit to China was almost scrubbed entirely due to tense relations between the two countries in recent months. Harper accused China of cyberspyin­g over the summer, while China accused a Canadian couple living in China of being spies.

Some Conservati­ve cabinet ministers, including Jason Kenney, are uneasy about forging closer ties to China, in part because of human rights concerns.

But with China’s middle class exploding, business groups have urged the government to strengthen the relationsh­ip.

On Friday, the founder of Chinese ecommerce juggernaut Alibaba said he hopes to sell 200,000 Canadian lobsters next week — part of an effort to assist Canada’s small and medium-sized companies in marketing their products to Chinese consumers.

Alibaba chairman Jack Ma stood alongside Harper as he declared Alibaba’s goal to sell legions of lobsters on Nov. 11, its annual deep-discount day.

“We want to help the small guys sell to China because the big guys, they don’t need us,” said Ma, a Hangzhou native who started up the company from his apartment 15 years ago.

Ma’s enthusiasm for stronger CanadaChin­a economic ties, however, didn’t seem to be fully reciprocat­ed by Harper, who confessed that one of the reasons he’d travelled to China was simply that Chinese officials “really wanted me to be here” for the APEC summit kicking off Monday. “We have a pretty important relationsh­ip here and pretty important opportunit­ies,” he said.

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