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China urged to free Canadian Michael Kovrig after year of detention

South China Morning Post

發布於 2019年12月05日10:12 • Bloomberg
  • International Crisis Group leaders write plea for Kovrig’s release in Washington Post commentary
  • His detention has a ‘chilling effect’ on all those who would like to engage Beijing, they write
People hold signs calling for China to release Canadian detainees Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig during an extradition hearing for Huawei Technologies Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou earlier this year. Photo: Reuters
People hold signs calling for China to release Canadian detainees Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig during an extradition hearing for Huawei Technologies Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou earlier this year. Photo: Reuters

Current and former chiefs of anti-war, non-profit organisation International Crisis Group have urged China to free Canadian analyst Michael Kovrig, ahead of his first anniversary in jail in a case which has strained ties between Beijing and Ottawa and fanned fears among business travellers.

President Robert Malley and three of his predecessors called for the immediate release of Kovrig " a Hong Kong-based analyst for the Brussels-based research group and a former Canadian diplomat " in a commentary published on Wednesday in The Washington Post.

The executives, who include Louise Arbour, Gareth Evans and Jean-Marie Guehenno, argued that Kovrig's detention by secret police on December 10, 2018 undercut efforts to better understand China at a time of growing global criticism.

"Michael's unjust detention comes at a particularly sensitive time in terms of China's role in the world," the authors said. "When China violates the rights of a foreigner on its soil, and when it does so with such a thinly disguised ulterior motive, it inevitably has a chilling effect on all those who would like to engage Beijing, whether in diplomacy, business or other mutually beneficial interaction."

Kovrig was detained in China along with Michael Spavor " a fellow Canadian who had organised trips to North Korea " days after Huawei Technologies executive Meng Wanzhou was arrested by Canadian authorities in Vancouver in response to a US extradition request.

The pair were formally arrested on charges related to the theft of state secrets in May and remain in secret detention, without access to family members or lawyers.

China has not denied a link between Huawei and the detentions of Kovrig and Spavor, saying only that the Canadians are being held "in accordance with the law" and urging Ottawa to correct its "mistake" in arresting Meng.

While there have been signs of easing tensions between the two sides, Meng's case continues to advance and Beijing has given little indication it might release Kovrig or Spavor.

Michael Kovrig (right) and fellow Canadian Michael Spavor (left) were both detained in China days after Huawei Technologies executive Meng Wanzhou was arrested. Photo: Facebook
Michael Kovrig (right) and fellow Canadian Michael Spavor (left) were both detained in China days after Huawei Technologies executive Meng Wanzhou was arrested. Photo: Facebook

The cases are among a spate of recent detentions that have fuelled concerns about foreigners visiting China as tensions build with the US and its allies over trade and security issues. Britain last month accused Chinese authorities of torturing a former Hong Kong consulate worker who was detained after a visit to the mainland, while Australia on Monday denounced as "unacceptable" the treatment of a Chinese-Australian writer held on suspicion of espionage.

Canadian consulate in Hong Kong halts mainland China visits for staff

Kovrig, who is on leave from the Canadian foreign service, has been questioned about his work as a diplomat, according to people familiar with the discussions. Such questioning may be a violation of Article 39 of the Vienna Convention, which was signed by China and covers the past work of former diplomats.

"The legitimate rights of the Canadians are lawfully protected, and the cases shall be free of foreign interference," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said in response to a question about the cases in August.

Meng Wanzhou leaves her home wearing an electronic ankle tag to attend a court hearing in Vancouver earlier this year. Photo: The Canadian Press via AP
Meng Wanzhou leaves her home wearing an electronic ankle tag to attend a court hearing in Vancouver earlier this year. Photo: The Canadian Press via AP

Meng, who is under house arrest during her extradition proceedings related to US allegations that she violated American sanctions against Iran, thanked her supporters on the first anniversary of her detention.

"It was never my intention to be stuck here for so long, but I suddenly find that a whole year has snuck by, and here I still am," she said in a letter posted on Huawei's website on Sunday.

The Crisis Group op-ed contrasted Meng's treatment with that of Kovrig, who has not yet had a court appearance and is allowed only monthly consular visits. Bloomberg News reported last year that he and Spavor were questioned multiple times a day and unable to turn off the lights in their cells.

"Michael Kovrig's detention is unjust and inhumane," Malley and the others wrote. "It should not have lasted one hour, let alone one year. China should set him free."

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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