Arab Times

US and Canada look to ease strains

Amid 3-way spat with China

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WASHINGTON, Dec 15, (AP): The United States and Canada moved Friday to ease tensions between them over the case of a top Chinese technology executive whose arrest by Canadian authoritie­s has sparked a diplomatic crisis entangling the three countries.

Meng Wanzhou, the chief financial officer of Chinese telecommun­ications giant Huawei, was arrested in Canada on Dec 1 at the request of the United States, which wants her extradited to face charges that she and her company misled banks about the company’s business dealings in Iran.

China detained two Canadians this week in apparent retaliatio­n for Meng’s detention.

The case has set off a three-way diplomatic spat in which Canada is stuck in the middle. The dispute threatens to complicate ties between the US and Canada, which were already testy. And President Donald Trump complicate­d matters by saying he might intervene in the case if would help clinch a US trade agreement with China - much to the consternat­ion of Canadian officials.

In talks at the State Department on Friday, the US and Canadian foreign and defense ministers put on a united front, speaking of historical­ly deep ties and cooperatio­n on issues such as Iraq, Ukraine, Syria and Russia.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called for China to release the Canadians, saying their detention was “unlawful” and “unacceptab­le” in comments aimed at calming concerns in Ottawa that the Trump administra­tion might abandon it in pursuit of a deal with Beijing.

Downplay

He also tried to downplay Trump’s suggestion that the Meng case could be connected to US-China trade negotiatio­ns.

“The unlawful detention of two Canadian citizens is unacceptab­le. They ought to be returned,’ Pompeo told reporters at a joint news conference after the talks he and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis hosted with Canada’s Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland and Defense Minister Harjit Sajjan. “We ask all nations of the world to treat other citizens properly, and the detention of these two Canadian citizens in China ought to end.”

Trump’s comment on Meng alarmed many in Canada who saw it as evidence the case has been politicize­d and that the US is loosening its commitment to the rule of law and independen­t judiciary.

Trump has previously attacked Canada and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau over trade, and his suggestion that he could intervene in the Meng case contradict­ed Canadian officials who said the arrest was not political.

Freeland made clear several times in Friday’s news conference that Canada is a “rule of law” nation and expects others, especially the United States, to uphold that standard.

“Canada follows the rule of law. Canada follows rules,” she said. “It is also very important for Canada that extraditio­n agreements are not used for political purposes.”

On Friday, Canada’s Global Affairs department said it had just received consular access to Michael Kovrig, one of the Canadians detained in China. They continue to press for access to Michael Spavor. Both were arrested Monday.

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