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China, Canada ministers meet as tensions rise over detainees by Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) Aug 26, 2020 Canada's foreign minister has called the release of two citizens detained in China a "top priority" for his country during a meeting with his Chinese counterpart in Italy. Relations between Beijing and Ottawa have been increasingly bitter since an executive for Chinese tech giant Huawei was arrested in Vancouver in December 2018 and China detained two Canadian nationals in apparent retaliation. Canadian foreign minister Francois-Philippe Champagne on Tuesday said the cases of former diplomat Michael Kovrig and businessman Michael Spavor "remain a top priority for the Government of Canada". He called for their immediate release at a meeting in Rome with Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi, Ottawa said in a statement. Kovrig and Spavor were charged with espionage in June, while Beijing has called the arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou a political manoeuvre on behalf of the United States, which is seeking her extradition on fraud charges. China accuses Washington of attempting to curb telecoms firm Huawei's rise. Wang said the blame for poor ties lay with Ottawa and urged it to "remove the main obstacles currently affecting the development of China-Canada relations", according to a statement from the Chinese foreign ministry Wednesday. "China and Canada have no historical disputes or actual conflict of interest, but because of the unprovoked detention of a Chinese citizen, the relationship between the two countries has encountered serious difficulties," Wang said, without naming Meng specifically. Meng, who is charged with bank fraud linked to alleged violations of US sanctions against Iran, remains under house arrest in Vancouver while Canadian courts hear the case for her extradition. A bid by her lawyers to access intelligence documents to support claims of abuse of process was denied by Canada's federal court on Tuesday. Canada's foreign ministry said in its statement that Champagne had urged China to "grant clemency to all Canadians facing the death penalty in China". Beijing has sentenced a number of Canadians to death on drug trafficking charges since last year, saying the cases were handled "independently in strict accordance with the law". Wang met with Champagne on the first stop of a European tour this week, during which he is expected to shore up economic and diplomatic relations with the European Union.
Canada court rejects Huawei exec's request to see intel docs The Chinese telecom giant's chief financial officer was arrested on a US warrant in December 2018 during a stopover in Vancouver. She is charged with bank fraud linked to violations of US sanctions against Iran, and has been fighting extradition ever since. Meng's lawyers sought access to the documents to support claims of abuse of process, which if proven could result in a stay of the extradition proceedings. But the court found that the information contained in the documents "is not relevant to the allegations of abuse of process described by counsel for Ms. Meng." "The information does not provide the 'missing pieces of the puzzle' that Ms. Meng seeks," Justice Catherine Kane wrote in the decision. The judge also agreed with the attorney general that their disclosure "would be injurious to national security or international relations." The documents include Canadian Security Intelligence Service situational reports about Meng's arrest, emails and an agent's handwritten notes taken in the days following her arrest. Other details remain redacted. Meng's lawyers have been fighting a separate legal battle at the British Columbia Supreme Court for access to hundreds more federal police, border agency and justice department documents. In that case, the attorney general has argued privilege. In both courts, the defense alleged that US and Canadian authorities had conspired to gather evidence and interrogate Meng without a lawyer in the hours after she disembarked from a Hong Kong flight but before she was charged, in violation of her rights. They also accused the RCMP of providing serial numbers and technical specifications of her smartphones, tablet and laptop computer to the FBI. Meng remains under house arrest in Vancouver while the extradition case, which is due to wrap up in April 2021, is heard.
Danish military intel head suspended over surveillance concerns Copenhagen (AFP) Aug 24, 2020 The head of Denmark's military intelligence has been suspended, the defence ministry said Monday, after an audit raised suspicions his service was conducting illegal surveillance. The audit found that the military intelligence service "hid essential and crucial information" and "provided false information to the authorities" when quizzed about its surveillance operations between 2014 and 2020. It also said information on Danish citizens had been collected in a "unauthorised" way. The head ... read more
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