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In this image taken from a video footage run by China's CCTV via AP Video, Canadian Robert Lloyd Schellenberg attends his retrial. CCTV via AP Video

'Hostage politics': Campaigners condemn death penalty for Canadian citizen in China

Robert Lloyd Schellenberg was convicted of drug smuggling.

A CHINESE COURT’S decision to impose the death penalty on a convicted Canadian drug smuggler has escalated a diplomatic row that experts say has descended into a high-stakes game of “hostage politics”.

Beijing and Ottawa have been squabbling since last month, when Canada arrested the chief financial officer of top Chinese telecom company Huawei on a US extradition request related to Iran sanctions violations.

In a move observers see as retaliation, Chinese authorities detained two Canadian citizens – a former diplomat and a business consultant – on suspicion of endangering national security.

Then the previously little known case of Robert Lloyd Schellenberg, who was detained in December 2014, suddenly came to the fore.

He had been sentenced to 15 years in prison in November. But a month later, a higher court took up his appeal and ordered a retrial after ruling that the punishment was too lenient.

A new trial was hastily convened in the northeastern city of Dalian where prosecutors presented new evidence and a new witness showing that Schellenberg was connected to an international syndicate that planned to ship 222 kilograms (490 pounds) of methamphetamine to Australia. He claimed he chose the port city for his first China visit as a tourist.

The timing and swiftness of Schellenberg’s sentence, and the inclusion of new evidence presenting him as a key player in the drug deal, raised suspicion among observers.

“Playing hostage politics, China rushes the retrial of a Canadian suspect and sentences him to death in a fairly transparent attempt to pressure Canada to free the Huawei CFO,” Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth said in a tweet.

Donald Clarke, a George Washington University professor specialising in Chinese law, had an even grimmer term for the situation: “death threat diplomacy”.

“The Chinese government is not even trying to pretend that there was a fair trial here,” Clarke said.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expressed “extreme concern” that China had “chosen to arbitrarily” apply the death penalty.

Ottawa then issued a new travel advisory urging citizens to “exercise a high degree of caution in China due to the risk of arbitrary enforcement of local laws.”

The Chinese foreign ministry has vehemently denied that the case was politicised.

Suspect timing

China executes one or two foreigners every year – nearly all for drug offences, according to John Kamm, director of the US-based Dui Hua Foundation rights group.

Experts said retrials are rare in China, especially ones calling for a harsher sentence, but rights groups noted that courts are not independent and can be influenced by the ruling Communist Party.

“What’s unusual is how this case shifted from extremely slow handling to suddenly rapid fire movement through the courts,” said Margaret Lewis, a law professor at Seton Hall University.

The rare decision to allow three foreign journalists, including one from AFP, to attend the hearing makes it “clear that the Chinese government wants (the) international spotlight on this case”.

“The timing is suspect and certainly his nationality makes it all the more glaring,” she said.

Meng at home

Schellenberg, who said he was innocent and framed by an acquaintance, has 10 days to appeal to the same high court that rejected his first appeal.

Lewis said the court was likely to confirm the sentence and the case would move up to the Supreme People’s Court.

The top court could confirm the death penalty, give him a two-year suspended death sentence that would be converted into a long prison term or reduce his punishment, she said.

Clarke said:

My prediction is that the Supreme People’s Court will sit on the review decision for as long as Meng’s fate remains undetermined.

The fate of the other two Canadians, who have been held in undisclosed locations, remains a mystery.

Last week, Trudeau accused China of “arbitrarily and unfairly” detaining former diplomat Michael Kovrig and business consultant Michael Spavor, who were rounded up nine days after Canada arrested Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou.

The Chinese foreign ministry rejected Trudeau’s assertion that Kovrig, who now works for the International Crisis Group, still enjoyed diplomatic immunity.

Meng, meanwhile, was granted bail by a Canadian court, allowing her to wait for the US extradition hearing in a Vancouver house.

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    Mute Jamie McCormack
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    Sep 20th 2013, 7:56 PM

    They should ask John-Joe.

    158
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    Mute Mark
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    Sep 20th 2013, 8:53 PM

    Bet you it was because of this leap second issue that John Joe is looking at auctioneering as a career. Smart lad. He saw the trouble coming!

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    Mute Johnny Reynolds
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    Sep 20th 2013, 8:15 PM

    Waaaaaaay too much time on their hands

    70
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    Mute Alan Lawlor
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    Sep 20th 2013, 8:17 PM

    Why worry about leap seconds when summer time with a bi-annual movement by one hour causes large disruption not only to a technological age but also to personal sleep patterns.
    Summer time was invented when farmers were the majority of the workforce and now form a tiny minority.
    I personally find it disruptive as when dealing in international business, different countries change times on different days or not at all.

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    Mute Richie Kennedy
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    Sep 20th 2013, 9:09 PM

    Don’t take away our long summer nights! It’s all we have left in Ireland…

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    Mute Chopstix
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    Sep 20th 2013, 8:13 PM

    Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day….

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    Mute Little Jim
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    Sep 20th 2013, 9:10 PM

    Ha.
    I clocked that on the second time..

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    Mute John Doyle
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    Sep 20th 2013, 9:42 PM

    Sure it’s all relative.

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    Mute John Lally
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    Sep 20th 2013, 8:13 PM

    They’ll have a hard time coming up with a solution

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    Mute Derek Barrett
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    Sep 20th 2013, 9:06 PM

    Alan lawlor – I wouldn’t say farming is now a minority. It seems to me farming is back bone of our economy and will be for ever more I wreckon. And there not the reason for the clock change. Its done globally!

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    Mute Alan Lawlor
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    Sep 20th 2013, 9:49 PM

    Derek. I am not saying we should dispense with farming. But should we all be disrupted for a few thousand now directly affected? Especially as it was designed for things like milking in early morning and harvesting late at night without the modern benefits of electricity in milking parlours or spotlights on harvesters.
    Regarding global use of summertime, it is not used in all countries and the changeover date differs from country to country (eg US is different). Some countries including UK have been debating its abolition in recent years

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    Mute Jim Lenihan
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    Sep 20th 2013, 10:02 PM

    You can get better food cheaper from any other country

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    Mute Oliver Walker
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    Sep 20th 2013, 8:18 PM

    What actual time is it,right now?

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    Mute Jamie McCormack
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    Sep 20th 2013, 9:08 PM

    Hammer Time!

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    Mute Derek Barrett
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    Sep 20th 2013, 11:19 PM

    Well we obviously cant “dispense” of farming. Its keeping our economy alive at the moment. Strongly rumoured the suger industry is gonna be ressurcted. But I do agree with the abolishing of the hour change. No need in this modern world. Oh ya as I grew up I was always told it was for school drop offs and not for the farmers. And to JIM ‘better food imported “for cheaper is going in for ridiculous quote of the week. Are u for real?

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    Mute Padraig Culbert
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    Sep 20th 2013, 11:51 PM

    Wait a second…

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    Mute Stephen
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    Sep 21st 2013, 7:39 AM

    Time is irrelevant ,concerning builders plumbers or anybody in construction industry . Two weeks they said !!!

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    Mute Eileen Beattie
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    Sep 20th 2013, 11:59 PM

    “15 seconds every hundred years” Doesn’t sound like the world would end coz of it, does it?

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    Mute Jen Mccord
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    Sep 21st 2013, 8:17 AM

    Time doesn’t exist, clocks exist.;

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    Mute Annette Temple
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    Sep 20th 2013, 9:36 PM

    Dahh dah dah da, da da, da da. :)

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    Mute Annette Temple
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    Sep 21st 2013, 8:22 AM

    :( my comment moved… This was supposed to be under hammertime. Granted… it’s still fairly crap.

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    Mute BadDrivingIreland
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    Sep 21st 2013, 8:09 AM

    Give them a few seconds to think about it.

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