Close X
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadians Warned To Be Cautious About Travelling To Hong Kong Amid Unrest

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Aug, 2019 07:51 PM

    OTTAWA - The federal government is warning Canadians about travelling to Hong Kong amid massive protests and the Chinese military amassing on the border.

     

    The travel advisory went up around 9:30 ET this morning telling Canadians to "exercise a high degree of caution in Hong Kong due to ongoing large-scale demonstrations."

     

    "Our government is very aware that there are 300,000 Canadians in Hong Kong," Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland told a news conference Wednesday in Toronto, where she met with German's foreign minister Heiko Maas.

     

    "This is a turbulent moment in the world.... I would urge all Canadians, if you live in Hong Kong, if you are travelling there, if you have relatives who are there or are travelling there, to look at our travel advice."

     

    Canadians in Hong Kong should contact the Canadian consulate there if they need help, she added.

     

    Demonstrators and police have clashed violently in recent days after protesters took over the airport, shutting down all flights in or out for two days.

     

    The demonstrations began last spring after the Hong Kong government introduced a bill that would allow Hong Kong citizens to be sent to China if they are arrested. The protests escalated in June and have continued.

     

    On Monday, the second day protesters shut down the airport, clashes with riot police became violent. Chinese troops, meanwhile, have been seen amassing in large numbers in Shenzhen, a Chinese city about 30 kilometres from Hong Kong.

     

    More than 600 people have been arrested in Hong Kong as demonstrators voice their calls for democratic reforms.

     

    The Chinese government referred to the protesters as terrorists. Freeland said governments should be careful about such labels.

     

    "I think that it is very important everywhere in the world for governments to listen to the concerns of their people," she said, adding that while it may be tempting for governments to label protesters as something else when they do not agree with the message, "it is a mistake to do that."

     

    Canada's relationship with China is fraught with tension over Canada's arrest of Chinese telecom executive Meng Wanzhou, and China's subsequent detention of two Canadians allegedly for national security reasons.

     

    Businessman Michael Spavor and former diplomat Michael Kovrig were detained in China in December shortly after Meng was arrested at the Vancouver airport to face possible extradition to the United States, where she faces fraud charges.

     

    Freeland acknowledged "the dignity and the courage" of the two detained men and their families, and mentioned her one-on-one meeting with China's foreign minister Wang Yi last month in Thailand, where they discussed the Spavor and Kovrig matter as well as the extradition process for Meng.

     

    "It was a positive step that we were able to have a direct conversation about that."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Rift Widens Over Policing In Surrey: Third Member Jack Hundial Quits Mayor’s Safe Surrey Coalition

    SURREY, B.C. - Fractures within a civic political party in Surrey, B.C., are widening with the resignation of a third member of the Safe Surrey Coalition in the last two months.

    Rift Widens Over Policing In Surrey: Third Member Jack Hundial Quits Mayor’s Safe Surrey Coalition

    Premier Doug Ford Wants Answers On Mental Health Detainee Who Fled, Calls Man A ‘Nutcase’

    Premier Doug Ford Wants Answers On Mental Health Detainee Who Fled, Calls Man A ‘Nutcase’
    Ontario's premier vowed Thursday to get to the bottom of how a patient detained at a mental health hospital for killing his roommate managed to flee, calling the man a "nutcase."

    Premier Doug Ford Wants Answers On Mental Health Detainee Who Fled, Calls Man A ‘Nutcase’

    Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer's Pledge To Review New Food Guide Challenged By Health Community

    Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer is facing criticism from nutrition experts today after he pledged to review the new Canada Food Guide should the Tories win power this fall.    

    Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer's Pledge To Review New Food Guide Challenged By Health Community

    High Court Won't Hear NDP Expenses Case Over Mailings, Offices

    High Court Won't Hear NDP Expenses Case Over Mailings, Offices
    The Supreme Court may have just killed off the NDP's last legal hope to end a dispute with the House of Commons over payments to political staff, leaving the party's financial picture even gloomier.

    High Court Won't Hear NDP Expenses Case Over Mailings, Offices

    Supreme Court Won't Hear WestJet Appeal In Harassment Case

    Supreme Court Won't Hear WestJet Appeal In Harassment Case
    OTTAWA - WestJet Airlines has lost a legal bid to put an end to a proposed class-action harassment lawsuit.    

    Supreme Court Won't Hear WestJet Appeal In Harassment Case

    Wife Of Jailed Saudi Blogger Hails U.S. Vice-president Mike Pence's Call For Husband's Release

    The wife of jailed Saudi dissident Raif Badawi says she is grateful U.S. Vice-President Mike Pence has called on Saudi Arabia to free her husband.

    Wife Of Jailed Saudi Blogger Hails U.S. Vice-president Mike Pence's Call For Husband's Release