Advertisement
Advertisement
Meng Wanzhou
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Lu Shaye, China’s ambassador to Canada. Photo: Reuters

Chinese envoy Lu Shaye accuses Canada of ‘white supremacy’ for demanding release of detained citizens after arresting Huawei’s Meng Wanzhou

  • The envoy said Canada is employing a double standard in demanding the release of two men detained in China
  • He took aim at ‘elites’ and ‘some in the Canadian news media’ for saying that China’s judicial system is less independent than Canada’s
Meng Wanzhou

China’s ambassador to Canada has accused the country of adopting “Western egotism” and “white supremacy” in its reaction to the detention of two Canadians following the arrest of a Huawei Technologies executive in Canada last month.

The envoy said Canada is employing a double standard in demanding the release of two men who were detained in China nine days after the arrest of Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou – also known as Cathy Meng and Sabrina Meng – at the request of US authorities.

He also took aim at “elites” and “some in the Canadian news media” for saying that China’s judicial system is less independent than Canada’s.

“It seems that, to some people, only Canadian citizens shall be treated in a humanitarian manner and their freedom deemed valuable, while Chinese people do not deserve that,” Lu Shaye wrote in an op-ed published in the Ottawa-based Hill Times newspaper on Wednesday.

“The reason why some people are used to arrogantly adopting double standards is due to Western egotism and white supremacy.”

“In such a context,” he added, “the rule of law is nothing but a tool for their political ends and a fig leaf for their practising hegemony in the international arena. What they have been doing is not showing respect for the rule of law, but mocking and trampling the rule of law.”

Canada has been rallying other countries – including the US, UK, Germany and France, while Japan took a more subdued tone – to criticise China’s seizure of the two Canadians.

Lu criticised that as “a few individual countries” and questioned if they “really represent the whole international community?”

Former Canadian envoys have drawn a clear link in the cases, saying the two Canadians were detained in response to Meng’s arrest. Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor remain in custody and have had scant access to Canadian authorities. China has said they were detained on “national security” grounds.

Meng was released on bail four weeks ago and is living under restrictions in her million-dollar Vancouver home.

The US has also called for the release of Spavor, an entrepreneur, and Kovrig, a former diplomat.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has urged China to “immediately” release the two Canadians, saying they were “arbitrarily” detained. Trudeau has said Canada had no choice but to arrest Meng during a stopover in Vancouver last month due to an extradition treaty with the US.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Envoy hits at Canada for ‘white supremacy’
71