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Canada and its allies must match words with action in standing up to China

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It was good to see representatives of two dozen countries joining with Canada on Monday to show their support for Michael Kovrig, the Canadian put on trial in China on trumped-up spy charges.

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Opinion

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 21/03/2021 (1332 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

It was good to see representatives of two dozen countries joining with Canada on Monday to show their support for Michael Kovrig, the Canadian put on trial in China on trumped-up spy charges.

The diplomats marched along the sidewalk outside a courthouse in Beijing where Kovrig’s trial was being conducted in absolute secrecy. A couple of days earlier, in another Chinese court, another Canadian, Michael Spavor, was tried on similar charges. And again, in complete secrecy.

Demonstrating symbolic support for the ordeal undergone by the “two Michaels” is certainly a good thing.

Kevin Frayer - GETTY IMAGES
Police ask journalists to move back as diplomats request entry to the trial for Canadian Michael Kovrig at a court in Beijing, China.
Kevin Frayer - GETTY IMAGES Police ask journalists to move back as diplomats request entry to the trial for Canadian Michael Kovrig at a court in Beijing, China.

But how much better would it be if the symbolism was matched by actual action? How much more effective would it be if those countries (and others) backed up their sentiments by taking concrete steps to show the Chinese government that its strategic hostage-taking will not be tolerated?

Unfortunately, though, the countries that paraded their support for Kovrig and Spavor aren’t doing that.

Nor do they, and the other countries that signed up to a Canadian-sponsored declaration against “arbitrary detention in state-to-state relations” as recently as Feb. 15, seem prepared to do more than be publicly annoyed at China’s government.

It’s all words, at least so far. The grandly named declaration against arbitrary detention, clearly aimed at Beijing, is toothless. It doesn’t require the countries that signed it to do anything at all.

It’s clearly time for Canada and other countries to pass from words to action when it comes to standing up to China. And, in fact, some of them are doing just that, but on an entirely different issue.

On Monday, even as Canada was blustering away at Beijing for going ahead with the secret trials of the two Michaels, Ottawa joined with the United States, Britain and the European Union in imposing sanctions on four high-level Chinese officials and a state agency to protest the treatment of that country’s Muslim Uyghur minority. Parliament has labelled it “genocide.”

So it can be done. China isn’t too big or too important to be spared sanctions by Ottawa — as long, it seems, as it’s part of a wider campaign orchestrated by our senior partners in Washington, London and Brussels.

But not, apparently, to pressure Beijing to free Kovrig and Spavor, imprisoned now for 833 days as retaliation for Canada’s detention of a Chinese telecom executive in Vancouver for possible extradition to the United States.

Ottawa has preferred the softly-softly approach for fear of making things worse for the two Michaels. But how much worse can it get? Imprisoned for more than two years; denied access to family and consular help; tried in secret without any evidence being made public. China has responded to Canada’s bend-over-backwards reasonableness with open contempt.

If the countries that supported the Canadians on Monday, and those that signed the declaration against arbitrary detention, were serious, they would join with Canada in imposing sanctions against Beijing to underline their opposition to this disgraceful behaviour. It’s easy for Beijing to dismiss Ottawa alone as a minor pest, but a coordinated campaign to free Kovrig and Spavor would sting.

Such a campaign might well target senior officials in China’s politicized judicial system. It might deny them and their families the right to travel abroad, including for education, or access financial assets outside China. And it might call into question participation in the summer Olympics scheduled for next year in Beijing.

For Canada, it should also include a fresh look at whether it’s worth being part of the Beijing-sponsored Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.

The Trudeau government had Canada join the bank in 2016, at a time when hope still flourished that a new and more cooperative era with China was at hand. But China’s government has made that impossible. Under President Xi Jinping, it has threatened enemies and potential partners alike, cracked down on the Uyghurs and in Hong Kong, and generally shown it’s out to dominate, not cooperate.

Beijing’s treatment of the two Michaels is part of that pattern. Canada has no choice but to match its words of protest with action — and like-minded countries should join with it.

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