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Canada reacts to death sentence given to citizen in China

This file photo shows Chinese President Xi Jinping (L) and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at a meeting at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, China, on December 5, 2017. (By AFP)

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has accused China of acting “arbitrarily” in handing down a death sentence to a Canadian citizen over drug smuggling.

Robert Lloyd Schellenberg, 36, was detained back in 2014 — long before a diplomatic dispute broke out between Canada and China over the arrest in December 2018 of an official with the Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei on US-filed charges.

Schellenberg had originally received a 15-year sentence and had appealed. On Monday, a court in northeast China’s Dalian found the earlier sentence to have been too lenient and sentenced him to death.

In reaction to the ruling, Trudeau expressed “extreme concern,” accusing Beijing of acting “arbitrarily.”

“It is of extreme concern to us as a government, as it should be to all our international friends and allies, that China has chosen to begin to arbitrarily apply (the) death penalty... as in this case,” he told reporters in Ottawa on Monday.

China has strict rules regarding narcotics crimes. Anyone found with more than 50 grams of a controlled substance can face the death penalty.

​Canadian citizen Robert Lloyd Schellenberg attends his retrial at the Dalian Intermediate People’s Court, in Dalian, in northeastern China’s Liaoning Province, on January 14, 2019. (Photo by CCTV via AFP)

Canada issues travel warning for China

Meanwhile, the Canadian government updated its travel warning on Tuesday, calling on its citizens to “exercise a high degree of caution in China due to the risk of arbitrary enforcement of local laws.”

The development is expected to deteriorate already tense relations between Beijing and Ottawa, weeks after the arrest of the chief financial officer of Huawei, Meng Wanzhou, in Vancouver over charges filed by the US.

Two other Canadian nationals — former diplomat Michael Kovrig and business consultant Michael Spavor — have since been arrested in China over national security issues.

Last week, Trudeau accused Beijing of “arbitrarily and unfairly” detaining Kovrig and Spavor.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry reacted by saying that Kovrig, who now works for the International Crisis Group, still enjoyed diplomatic immunity.

Meng is currently free on bail, waiting for a hearing to decide about her possible extradition to the US, where she faces up to 30 years in prison over charges of bypassing unilateral sanctions on Iran.

China warns Poland over Huawei employee case

Also recently, a group of countries led by the US accused Huawei of spying on behalf of China, an allegation rejected not only by the company itself and Beijing but also by major European firms.

That accusation came after Poland on Friday arrested an employee of Huawei over alleged espionage. But Warsaw has insisted that the spying was an individual act.

In a related development, Beijing on Monday called on Poland to properly handle the case of the Chinese national, whom Huawei has also dismissed.

“For China, we attach importance to relations with Poland. We think that maintaining healthy and stable development of China-Poland relations is in the common interests of both countries,” said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying on Monday.

“We hope Poland can meet China halfway, and can work together to do more for mutual trust and cooperation, so as to ensure the continuous, stable, and healthy development of the China-Poland relations,” she added.


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