Canada China envoy assailed for assessing merits of Meng extradition case
OTTAWA — Canada’s envoy to China faced criticism Wednesday for opining on how a Huawei executive might avoid extradition to the United States, fuelling speculation his remarks were a political ploy to end the government’s diplomatic crisis with China.
The candid remarks by John McCallum, Canada’s ambassador to China, marked a radical departure from the Trudeau government’s firm public line that the extradition proceedings of Meng Wanzhou are an independent — and apolitical — legal process that must be respected.
Speaking to Chinese-language reporters Tuesday in the Toronto area, McCallum listed several arguments the legal team representing Huawei’s chief financial officer can make in her defence. Meng was arrested Dec. 1 in Vancouver, at the request of United States authorities who alleged she used a Huawei subsidiary to evade sanctions against Iran.
Topping McCallum’s list was the possibility of political interference stemming from last month’s comments by U.S. President Donald Trump that he might intervene in Meng’s case if it would help him strike a trade deal with China.