China sentences Canadian to 11 years in prison
By Chris Buckley
BEIJING – A court in China sentenced a Canadian businessman, Michael Spavor, to 11 years in prison after declaring him guilty of spying Wednesday (11), deepening a split with Canada, which has condemned the case as political hostage-taking.
Spavor has the right to appeal the judgment, but Chinese courts rarely overturn criminal judgments, and his fate could rest on deal-making among Beijing, Ottawa and Washington at a time when Beijing’s relations with Western powers are particularly tense. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada denounced Spavor’s sentence as “absolutely unacceptable and unjust”.
In a brief online statement, the court in Dandong, a northeast Chinese city next to North Korea where Spavor had often done business, also said that he would be deported, but gave no details about the timing. The court said it had found Spavor guilty of obtaining state secrets and providing them to a foreign recipient, but it gave no details.
The sentencing suggests that a court in Beijing is likely to announce a similar guilty judgment soon in a parallel spying case against another Canadian, Michael Kovrig, a former diplomat arrested about the same time as Spavor, in late 2018. The detentions occurred less than two weeks after the police in Vancouver detained a Chinese telecom executive, Meng Wanzhou, at the request of US prosecutors.
Meng remains on bail in Vancouver and has been fighting extradition to the United States, where she faces fraud charges linked to her role as the CFO of Chinese tech giant Huawei. Spavor’s conviction came amid closing arguments at the Supreme Court of British Columbia over whether Meng can be extradited.
The detentions of the two Michaels and Meng have opened a rancorous rift between Beijing and Ottawa and have added to the growing tensions between China and Canada’s democratic allies.
In commenting on Spavor’s sentencing, Trudeau criticized the legal process that had ensnared the Canadians.
“The verdict for Mr. Spavor comes after more than 2 1/2 years of arbitrary detention, a lack of transparency in the legal process, and a trial that did not satisfy even the minimum standards required by international law,” he said in the statement. He said the government would keep working to bring the Canadians home.
The sentence will fuel anger in Canada, where public attitudes toward the Chinese government have hardened over the prosecution of the two Canadians. In particular, many critics have contrasted the harsh conditions the Canadians have faced with Meng’s luxurious lifestyle.
The Canadians have been held in secret jails for more than two years, cut off from their families and with limited legal and consular access. The two were tried in short and opaque trials in March. Meng, meanwhile, has been out on a bail of 10 million Canadian dollars in a seven-bedroom mansion in a rarefied Vancouver neighbourhood, where she has had private painting lessons and massages. She wears a GPS tracker on her left ankle and has been able to move around Vancouver.
Chinese officials have accused Canada of entrapping Meng and have denied that Spavor and Kovrig are being kept as hostages to pressure Ottawa to let Meng return to China.
“This is nothing short of a political incident in which Canada played a very disgraceful role as an accomplice,” a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Hua Chunying, said in March about Meng’s case. “We urge the Canadian side to immediately release Ms. Meng Wanzhou.”
But Trudeau has said that Spavor and Kovrig were arrested on “trumped-up charges” as “an attempt to try and pressure us to release the executive,” and he has defended Meng’s detention as simply an application of the rule of law and Canadian extradition treaty obligations with the United States.
The two Canadians faced trial in March, and diplomats from Canada and other supportive governments were excluded from attending the hearings.
Another Canadian caught in the tensions, Robert Lloyd Schellenberg, was initially sentenced to 15 years in prison for methamphetamine trafficking. But in 2019 he was handed a death sentence in a one-day retrial, one month after the Canadian authorities arrested Meng. On Tuesday (10), a Chinese court upheld the death sentence.
In 2018, Hu Xijin, the editor of the Communist Party-run Global Times newspaper, warned that if Meng were extradited to the United States, “China’s revenge will be far worse than detaining a Canadian.”
Ties between Canada and China have soured since the 2018 detentions, reflecting Canadian anger over China’s early mishandling of the coronavirus outbreak and its sweeping crackdown on pro-democracy forces in Hong Kong, a former British colony that has been the source of many migrants leaving for Canada.
The Chinese government’s ire with Canada grew after Trudeau’s government imposed sanctions over Xinjiang, the northwest Chinese region where largely Muslim minorities have enduring sweeping detentions.
The two Canadians were both expatriates using their expertise in Asia when they were bundled away by Chinese state security officers. Kovrig had worked since 2017 as a senior adviser for the International Crisis Group, a nonprofit organization that provides analysis and advice on conflicts across the world, including China and North Korea.
Spavor who speaks fluent Korean, including the distinctive dialect of the North, promoted cultural tours and business contacts with North Korea. He won passing celebrity for helping to organize visits to North Korea in 2013 and 2014 by Dennis Rodman, the flamboyant former basketball star.
Kovrig has been kept so isolated in a detention centre that he did not know details of the coronavirus pandemic until October, when Canadian diplomats informed him during a virtual visit, his wife, Vina Nadjibulla, has said.
The sentencing announcement did not reveal details of the accusations against Kovrig or Spavor. A report issued in 2019 by a news service for the Chinese Communist Party’s law-and-order committee said that Spavor had been a source for Kovrig, who was a prominent expert on North Korea, the South China Sea and other regional trouble spots that involve China. The families of both men have vigorously maintained that they are innocent.
-New York Times