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China to try second Canadian accused of “espionage”

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

On Monday, China began trying the second Canadian who was arrested in 2018 briefly after the detainment of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou in Canada.

The trial of former diplomat Michael Kovrig, who is being accused of espionage, began a couple of days after another Canadian, entrepreneur Michael Spavor who was also arrested in 2018, went on trial. There is no doubt that the Chinese communist regime has fabricated the cases against both Canadian citizens.

On Monday, the Beijing police had already enclosed the courthouse denying entry to Canadian diplomats.

China officially accused Kovrig and Spavor of espionage in June 2020.

Canadian Embassy’s Charge d’Affaires Jim Nickel told journalists that the trial has begun and that diplomats are forbidden from entering the courthouse. It is clear that this will be another staged show trial by Beijing used to turn against human rights activists. It is very likely that the court’s ruling will not be in the Canadians’ favor.

“We are deeply concerned that the access to the court has been restricted and that the trial lacks any transparency,” Nickel expressed.

A court official explained to journalists that access to the court has been restricted because it is a case pertaining to national security. Cases of “national security” usually end with the execution of the accused.

Canadian diplomats were also unable to attend Spavor’s trial which took place in the northern Chinese city of Dandong.

The trial lasted less than three hours and did not produce a verdict.

On 1 December 2018, daughter of Ren Zhengfei, the founder of Huawei, Meng Wanzhou was detained at Vancouver International Airport after a request by US authorities.

The US issued an extradition request on grounds of Meng circumventing US sanctions against Iran.

Her detainment in Canada took place nine days prior to the arrests of Kovrig and Spavor in China.

Former Canadian ambassador to China Guy Saint-Jacques told the news agency AFP that he expects Kovrig’s trial to be very short.

“The message sent to the US is clear ­– if you want to help these Canadians, make sure that Meng is returned to China as soon as possible,” Saint-Jacques expressed.

Most people accused in China are found guilty by the courts, and both Canadians may face a life sentence, or even the death penalty, if they are found guilty of “spying for foreign nations” and “providing state secrets” to them.

After her detainment, Meng was released on bail and now resides in her mansion in Vancouver under house arrest. It is expected that the US’ extradition request will be fully reviewed by May if appeals do not drag the process out.

The US wants to place Meng on trial for fraud, circumvention of the sanctions imposed against Iran and providing false information to US banks. Her lawyers deny the accusations.

If Meng is found guilty by the court, she could face more than 30 years in jail.

This case is proof that Beijing is willing to kidnap foreign nationals to then be able to engage in blackmail and extortion on the highest level.

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The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

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jpthiran
March 24, 2021

…that´s what happens when fealing with dictatorships…anything goes…there is no rule of law…just endless brutality…

platon
platon
Reply to  jpthiran
April 3, 2021

Yes, I agree. Canada is now a sorry minor dictatorship/satrapy within the entity called the Five Eyes + Israel.

Oilman
Oilman
March 24, 2021

The minute Trump stated that he could use Meng Wanzhou as a bargaining chip, Canada should have immediately released her. This was clearly a political thing hence for that reason alone, Canada needed to step away from US request to arrest the woman. But, since Canada is clearly another US bitch, Trudeau did what he was told.

mijj
mijj
March 25, 2021

hmmm .. .was the Canadian accused of espionage, or was he accused of “espionage”?
what’s the purpose of the quotes around “espionage”?

platon
platon
Reply to  mijj
April 3, 2021

I call such use of punctuation when lies are being told: ‘weasel quotes’.

Guy
Guy
March 25, 2021

Blackmail and extortion seem to work both ways.
One thing I don’t understand is the US imposes sanctions on another country and anyone that contravenes those sanctions is guilty ,regardless of which country in the world contravenes US sanctions . Canada fell into a trap and we will soon see how solid our judicial system here is in Canada ,or is it as corrupted as what we have seen in the US.

platon
platon
Reply to  Guy
April 3, 2021

Yes, Meng is at least as much a political prisoner as the “two Michaels”.
Perhaps even more so as she was shamefully detained by the Five Eyes’ toadies of the day, Trudeau and Freeland, upon orders from The Orange One.

platon
platon
April 3, 2021

By placing “espionage” in quotes, does the author mean to imply that Canadians certainly would never spy on anyone and that such an accusation is de facto and de jure an absurdity? If so, how is this any different from Greta Thongberg’s [sic] infamous refrain of the centuries-old, Anglo-Zionist supremacist meme: “How dare you”? To write a story like this without some reference to the initial hostage-taking of Meng Wan Zhou by Ukro-Fascist “Canadian” Attorney General Chrystia Freeland makes it clearly a propaganda hit-piece. I am not used to such low-information rubbish on the Duran I am not sure what… Read more »

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