Waterloo Region Record

Canada-China sign no-hacking agreement

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OTTAWA — Canada and China have agreed not to engage in state-sponsored hacking of each other’s trade secrets and business informatio­n.

The two countries reached the agreement during a meeting last week that was part of their new high-level national security dialogue.

“The two sides agreed that neither country’s government would conduct or knowingly support cyber-enabled theft of intellectu­al property, including trade secrets or other confidenti­al business informatio­n, with the intent of providing competitiv­e advantages to companies or commercial sectors,” says a communique from the Prime Minister’s Office.

The two sides also had “candid” discussion­s about a possible extraditio­n treaty, said the statement — something China wants, but that Canada has said is a long way off.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang have deepened the political engagement between the two countries with regular “dialogues” such as the security one that took place last week in Ottawa.

Daniel Jean, Trudeau’s national security adviser, led the talks with Wang Yongqing, the secretary-general of China’s Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission.

Cybersecur­ity was one the many topics on the agenda, along with counterter­rorism, combating organized crime and regional security issues such as the crisis in Syria and North Korea’s nuclear sabre-rattling.

The government statement discloses the two sides also discussed “judicial and rule of law issues.”

John McCallum, the former immigratio­n minister now serving as Canada’s ambassador to China, has previously flagged judicial issues as an area of disagreeme­nt between the two as Canada tries to deepen its economic ties.

“We disagree on the death penalty,” McCallum told a House Commons committee in March.

“We disagree on some aspects of the rule of law and privately and publicly on how the Chinese government treats human rights advocates.”

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