Advertisement
Advertisement
Canada
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the government has been aware of Chinese police stations across the country for many months. Photo illustration: Reuters

Canada federal police probing new ‘rogue Chinese police stations’

  • The 2 Montreal-area facilities are allegedly conducting harassment of Chinese-Canadians and overseas Chinese, as well as other illegal operations
  • This follows the dismantling of other stations in Canada believed to have been part of a network of more than 50 worldwide – which Beijing has denied
Canada

Canadian federal police said Thursday they are investigating new rogue Chinese police stations in the Montreal area said to have been set up to carry out illegal policing operations on foreign soil and harass Chinese expatriates.

This follows the dismantling of several other stations in Canada that were believed to have been part of a network of more than 50 worldwide – which Beijing has denied.

In an email, Royal Canadian Mounted Police Sergeant Charles Poirier said the force’s national security unit “is conducting investigations targeting alleged Chinese police stations in Quebec”.

He identified the two stations as being located in Montreal and its suburb of Brossard.

02:04

Chinese ‘overseas service stations’ under scrutiny after claims they are illegal police stations

Chinese ‘overseas service stations’ under scrutiny after claims they are illegal police stations

“The RCMP acknowledges that Chinese-Canadians are victims of alleged activities carried out by these centres,” Poirier added.

“These activities and any other form of intimidation, harassment or harmful targeting of diaspora communities or individuals in Canada will not be tolerated.”

Speaking to reporters in Ottawa, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau commented: “We’ve been aware of Chinese police stations across the country for many months.”

“It is an issue that is of great concern to us,” he said.

According to Spain-based human rights group Safeguard Defenders, which first revealed the existence of such outposts around the world last year, Chinese agents working out of the stations have pressured Chinese nationals to return to China to face criminal charges.

An example of this was highlighted in US court documents in a case of foreign interference against seven Chinese nationals, which described a Canadian having been pressed in 2018 to return to China to face embezzlement charges.

Beijing has denied accusations it was conducting policing operations on foreign soil, and said previously identified Canadian locations – in a residential home, a single-story commercial building and a convenience store in the Toronto area – were set up simply to offer services, such as driving licence renewals, to Chinese nationals abroad.

Those had been investigated by the RCMP last October, and China’s ambassador in Ottawa was summoned in December in a diplomatic protest.

1