Champagne tells China ‘coercive diplomacy’ won’t work on Canada

Canadian Foreign Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said Thursday that China’s “coercive diplomacy” to try to gain the release of a Huawei executive fighting extradition to the US won’t work.

Champagne said in a conference call after meeting with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi in Rome this week, “I was very clear (with him) that coercive diplomacy is not going to lead to the desired outcome.”

“I told him that arbitrary detention was not conducive to relations between states ever, but certainly (not) now,” he said.

Ties between Ottawa and Beijing began to fray in December 2018 over the arrest of Chinese telecom giant Huawei’s chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou on a US warrant during a stopover in Vancouver.

She is wanted for alleged bank fraud and violations of US sanctions against Iran, and has been fighting extradition ever since.

Nine days later, China detained two Canadians, former diplomat Michael Kovrig and businessman Michael Spavor, on suspicions of espionage.

Canada and its allies have decried their arrests as “arbitrary.” And since January, Ottawa has been pressing for consular access after it was suddenly yanked.

Wang, said Champagne, “is well aware that the international community is seized with that issue.”

“This is not just two Canadians being detained arbitrarily,” he said. “Those are two citizens of a liberal democracy, and every liberal democracy in the world should be concerned about (China’s) use of coercive diplomacy.”

China has called Meng’s arrest a political manoeuvre on behalf of the United States, and accused Washington of attempting to curb Huawei’s rise.

On Wednesday, Wang called on Ottawa, which has left Meng’s fate up to the courts, to set the bilateral relationship right by freeing her.

“China and Canada have no historical disputes or actual conflict of interest, but because of the unprovoked detention of a Chinese citizen, the relationship between the two countries has encountered serious difficulties,” Wang said, without naming Meng specifically.

Wang met with Champagne Tuesday night on Wang’s first stop of a European tour, during which he is expected to shore up economic and diplomatic relations with the European Union.

“During this hour and a half (meeting), we had the chance to cover a lot of ground, and I’m cautiously optimistic that our voice has been heard and I’m looking forward to improvement on the consular side,” Champagne said.