The Borneo Post

Ottawa seeks help for release of Canadians held in China

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MONTREAL: Canada’s top diplomat on Saturday called on allies for support in securing the release of Canadians detained in China, noting that the arrests are a “worrying precedent” for the entire internatio­nal community.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said that China’s detention of former diplomat Michael Kovrig and consultant Michael Spavor is “not only a Canadian issue.

“It is an issue which concerns our allies and we’ve been discussing it very actively with our allies and partners around the world,” she said in a phone conference with reporters.

Freeland repeated a call for the “immediate” release of the two men who had been “detained arbitraril­y.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who was making a surprise visit to Canadian troops deployed in Mali, also weighed in, saying that: “We are impressing upon the Chinese how it is important that they release the detainees.”

“We feel that respecting the rule of law, respecting the rights of citizens, of prisoners is extremely important,” the premier said in televised remarks.

Kovrig and Spavor were detained on December 10 and accused of engaging in activities that “endanger China’s national security.”

Though no link has officially been made, the arrests seem to be in retaliatio­n of Canada’s December 10 arrest of Meng Wanzhou, a top executive at Chinese telecom giant Huawei.

Ottawa has repeatedly said Meng’s arrest was not political, but rather part of a judicial process in keeping with an extraditio­n treaty with Washington.

“In my conversati­ons with Chinese ambassador and in our conversati­on with Chinese officials, the Chinese officials have not directly made that connection” between Meng’s detention and the arrest of the Canadians, Freeland said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Chrystia Freeland
Chrystia Freeland

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