Windsor Star

Stop Meng extraditio­n process: lawyers

Top Huawei executive faces fraud trial in U.S.

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VANCOUVER • Defence lawyers for a senior Huawei executive have asked Canada’s foreign affairs minister to stop the extraditio­n process against their client, saying the request made by the United States was for political purposes, not legitimate law enforcemen­t reasons.

Meng Wanzhou’s lawyers say in a statement they decided to deliver written submission­s to Chrystia Freeland following former prime minister Jean Chrétien’s comments that withdrawin­g extraditio­n proceeding­s would improve relations with China and win the release of two Canadians being held there.

Freeland has rejected Chrétien’s view, which was reported in the Globe and Mail based on anonymous sources, saying heeding to external pressure in a single case would set a dangerous precedent that could make Canadians less safe around the world.

In the statement released Monday, Meng’s lawyers say Canada is at a “crossroads” regarding the United States’ request to extradite Meng to face a fraud trial for alleged conduct that would not be an offence in Canada.

Meng was arrested at Vancouver’s airport last December and a B.C. Supreme Court judge has accepted her defence team’s plan for the start of an extraditio­n hearing in January, which would conclude in about 16 months.

The U.S. Department of Justice laid charges of conspiracy, fraud and obstructio­n of justice against Meng and Huawei, alleging they misled a bank about Huawei’s ownership of a subsidiary called Skycom in an effort to circumvent U.S. sanctions against Iran.

Both Meng and Huawei have denied any wrongdoing. Her defence team says the extraditio­n proceeding­s are unpreceden­ted.

“What is most glaring about the extraditio­n request is that the conduct alleged against Ms. Meng could never ground a criminal prosecutio­n in Canada,” the lawyers say in the statement.

“Canada does not police the conduct of foreign persons in foreign lands that have nothing to do with Canada.”

They say all the allegation­s relevant to the extraditio­n request occurred in Hong Kong, involving Meng, a foreign national, and a foreign bank.

“None of the conduct occurred in the United States or Canada. No alleged victim resided in Canada. No aspect of any fact violated any Canadian law.”

The statement from Meng’s legal team says the United States has stood alone since May 2018 in maintainin­g strict sanction laws against Iran, which neither Canada nor any of its allies support.

Meng remains under house arrest at one of her two Vancouver homes and has filed a separate civil lawsuit against the RCMP and the Canada Border Services Agency.

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