San Francisco Chronicle

2 Canadians charged with spying in Huaweitied case

- By Ken Moritsugu Ken Moritsugu is an Associated Press writer.

BEIJING — Chinese prosecutor­s charged two detained Canadians with spying Friday in an apparent bid to step up pressure on Canada to drop a U.S. extraditio­n request for a Huawei executive under house arrest in Vancouver.

Michael Kovrig was charged by Beijing on suspicion of spying for state secrets and intelligen­ce. Michael Spavor was charged in Dandong, a city near the North Korean border, on suspicion of spying for a foreign entity and illegally providing state secrets.

The charges were announced by China’s highest prosecutor’s office in social media posts.

Asked what evidence China had against the two, Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian said only that each is charged with “secretly gathering state secrets for overseas forces with particular­ly serious consequenc­es.”

“The facts are clear and the evidence solid and sufficient,” Zhao said without elaboratin­g.

Both men have been held for 18 months. They were detained shortly after the December 2018 arrest of Meng Wanzhou, a top executive at Chinese tech giant Huawei. The daughter of Huawei’s founder was arrested at the request of U.S. authoritie­s who want her on fraud charges related to trade with Iran.

A Canadian judge ruled this month that the U.S. extraditio­n case against Meng could proceed to the next stage.

China has denied any explicit link between her case and the lengthy detention of the two Canadian men, but outside experts see them as tied and Chinese diplomats have strongly implied a connection.

Meng has been released on bail while her extraditio­n case proceeds in court and is residing in one of her two Vancouver mansions where she is reportedly working on a graduate degree. Kovrig and Spavor are being held at an undisclose­d location and up to now, have been denied access to lawyers or family members.

China has also sentenced two other Canadians to death and suspended imports of Canadian canola, while saying those moves were also unrelated to Meng’s case.

Relations between Canada and China are at their lowest point since the Chinese military’s bloody crackdown on prodemocra­cy protests in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 1989.

The tensions appear to be causing further harm to Huawei’s reputation in the Americas, with two of Canada’s three major telecommun­ication companies announcing earlier this month that they’ve decided not to use the Chinese tech giant for their nextgenera­tion 5G wireless network.

Bell Canada announced that Swedenbase­d Ericsson will be its supplier and Telus Corp. later announced that it had also selected Ericsson and Nokia.

Huawei, the world’s biggest supplier of network gear, has long been seen as a front for spying by China’s military and its highly skilled security services.

The U.S. has urged Canada to exclude Huawei, saying it is legally beholden to the Chinese regime. The United States and Australia have banned Huawei, citing concerns it is an organ of Chinese military intelligen­ce — a charge the company denies.

 ?? Ng Han Guan / Associated Press ?? The Canadian flag flies atop the embassy in Beijing. Relations between the nations have deteriorat­ed.
Ng Han Guan / Associated Press The Canadian flag flies atop the embassy in Beijing. Relations between the nations have deteriorat­ed.

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