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Huawei exec wants Canada's bail conditions eased by Staff Writers Vancouver (AFP) Dec 23, 2020 An executive for Chinese tech giant Huawei, facing extradition to the United States on fraud and conspiracy charges, plans to ask Canadian authorities to ease her bail conditions, her lawyers said Wednesday. Meng Wanzhou's attorneys revealed their upcoming application during a routine scheduling hearing in Vancouver, where the Huawei chief financial officer is under court-ordered house arrest. Lawyer Mona Duckett said the request would be related to "the daytime supervision of Ms Meng outside of her curfew hours." Prosecutor John Gibb-Carsley said the government would be opposed to relaxing the conditions. The businesswoman -- whose father is Huawei founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei -- has been in a two-year battle against extradition over charges Huawei violated US sanctions on Iran. She is accused of hiding Huawei's relationship with former subsidiary Skycom in Iran from HSBC bank. Meng, who has denied the charges, was arrested in 2018 at the Vancouver airport on a US warrant, causing a major diplomatic crisis between China and Canada. Following her arrest, a judge released the 48-year-old on bail conditions including a curfew in one of her two Vancouver mansions, a GPS monitoring ankle bracelet and daytime supervision by private security guards. Wednesday's hearing in the Supreme Court of British Columbia also saw lawyers hash out upcoming dates for her extradition hearings, as well as the defense lawyers' allegations Meng's rights were repeatedly abused. They argue US President Donald Trump "poisoned" her case when he said he might intervene in exchange for Chinese trade concessions. They also say the United States has no jurisdiction over the alleged crimes and extraditing her there would violate international law. The lawyers also accuse Canadian authorities of violating Meng's rights during her interrogation. Meng's next extradition hearings are scheduled for March 1, 2021, and are expected to finish in mid-May. Canada alleges two Canadian citizens detained in China on espionage suspicions were held in retaliation for Meng's arrest.
Contradicting Trump, US justice chief fingers Russia in hack Washington (AFP) Dec 21, 2020 US Attorney General Bill Barr said Monday that Russia was behind the massive hack of US government computer systems, contradicting President Donald Trump's suggestion that China could be involved. Two days after Trump downplayed what intelligence experts have called the most devastating break in US computer security in years, Barr said he agreed with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's attributing the hack to Moscow. "From the information I have, I agree with Secretary Pompeo's assessment. It certa ... read more
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