Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Low profile for Canada on Tiananmen anniversary amid Kovrig, Spavor jailings

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jun, 2019 06:05 PM

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau marked Tuesday's 30th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre by saying he has real concerns about China's human-rights record, including the repression of an estimated one million ethnic Uighurs.

    Trudeau offered that statement when questioned by a journalist about the anniversary during an event in Vancouver, but his government had yet to speak proactively about it.

    U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the European Union's Federica Mogherini urged China to address its decision to kill hundreds, perhaps thousands, of pro-democracy student protesters in 1989.

    That followed a statement in the Senate on Monday by Liberal Sen. Jim Munson, who covered the massacre in Beijing as a CTV television journalist, in which he criticized the Chinese communist government for erasing all traces of the event from its history.

    Canada-China relations are at an all-time low following the arrests of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, and Ottawa's calls for their release have prompted angry dismissals and admonishments from Beijing.

    The pair continues to languish in Chinese custody, on allegations of espionage, in what is widely viewed as retribution for Canada's arrest last December of Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wangzhou on an extradition request by the U.S.

     

     

     

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Pedestrian Dies Of Injuries After Being Struck By Car In Vancouver

    Vancouver police say a 38-year-old city man has died of his injuries after being hit by a car Saturday evening.

    Pedestrian Dies Of Injuries After Being Struck By Car In Vancouver

    B.C. Ferry Delayed 10 Minutes Because Of Swimming Black Bear At Horseshoe Bay

    B.C. Ferry Delayed 10 Minutes Because Of Swimming Black Bear At Horseshoe Bay
    VANCOUER, B.C. — On the balmy Saturday morning at the beginning of the long weekend, little did the passengers of a ferry in B.C. know that they would be delayed by a black bear taking a dip.    

    B.C. Ferry Delayed 10 Minutes Because Of Swimming Black Bear At Horseshoe Bay

    Focus On Traumatized Boys Critical To Gender Equality, New Research Shows

    Focus On Traumatized Boys Critical To Gender Equality, New Research Shows
    TORONTO — Boys in poor urban areas around the world are suffering even more than girls from violence, abuse and neglect, groundbreaking international research published on Monday suggests.    

    Focus On Traumatized Boys Critical To Gender Equality, New Research Shows

    Carbon Tax, Desk-Thumping On Agenda In Upcoming Alberta Legislature Session

    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Jason Kenney's government heads to the legislature this week to make noise with an ambitious legislative agenda while trying to keep a hush on daily affairs.

    Carbon Tax, Desk-Thumping On Agenda In Upcoming Alberta Legislature Session

    Canada's Parole Officers Say Correctional System Has Reached Breaking Point

    Canada's Parole Officers Say Correctional System Has Reached Breaking Point
    OTTAWA — Canada's parole officers say the country's corrections system is at a breaking point due to workloads that are "insurmountable" — a situation they say poses real risks to public safety.

    Canada's Parole Officers Say Correctional System Has Reached Breaking Point

    More Women, Few Minorities: Docs Detail Results Of Liberal Patronage Overhaul

    More Women, Few Minorities: Docs Detail Results Of Liberal Patronage Overhaul
    Documents from the Privy Council Office show that as of last year, 55.5 per cent of appointees to federal agencies, boards and organizations were women, slightly above their proportion in the Canadian population.

    More Women, Few Minorities: Docs Detail Results Of Liberal Patronage Overhaul