The Guardian (USA)

Canada judge delays extraditio­n hearings in win for Huawei executive

- Reuters in Vancouver

A Canada judge has agreed to delay Meng Wanzhou’s US extraditio­n hearings for three months, according to a ruling read in court on Wednesday, handing the Huawei chief financial officer’s defense team a win.

Meng, 49, was arrested at Vancouver internatio­nal airport on charges of bank fraud in the US for allegedly misleading HSBC about Huawei’s business dealings in Iran, causing the bank to break US sanctions.

Meng’s team had asked for more time to review additional documents that became available after HSBC and Huawei reached a settlement in Hong Kong. Extraditio­n hearings were originally set to wrap up in May.

Her defense attorney Richard Peck argued in court on Monday that they were requesting “a modest frame of time” to be able to read the documents and potentiall­y file them as evidence in the British Columbia supreme court.

Lawyers representi­ng the attorney general of Canada had fought the adjournmen­t of hearings set to start on Monday, arguing that Meng’s team had been given more time than was usual in an extraditio­n to make their case, and the contents of the documents were too redacted to be relied upon as significan­t to the case.

“The outstandin­g feature of this applicatio­n is that it’s based on speculatio­n,” the prosecutor Robert Frater said on Monday.

But the associate chief justice Heather Holmes disagreed, siding with the defense in granting an adjournmen­t.

Her reasons will be read out on in court on 28 April.

 ??  ?? Meng Wanzhou, center right, leaves the British Columbia supreme court this month. Photograph: Rich Lam/AP
Meng Wanzhou, center right, leaves the British Columbia supreme court this month. Photograph: Rich Lam/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States