Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Cabinet Minister Michael Chan Slams Claims Of Chinese Influence As Debunked, False

The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2015 11:57 AM
    TORONTO — An Ontario cabinet minister says a newspaper article about concerns from Canada's spy agency that he was under the influence of the Chinese government is little more than a rehash of debunked, "ludicrous" allegations.
     
    The Globe and Mail reported Tuesday that the Canadian Security Intelligence Service warned the Ontario government in 2010 that Michael Chan may have been susceptible to Chinese influence and had "unusually close ties to Chinese officials."
     
    In a statement today Chan says the article repeats five-year-old, unfounded suggestions and notes that the paper itself at the time in 2010 called the allegations "reckless, foolish and contradictory."
     
    Premier Kathleen Wynne says Chan, who is now the minister of citizenship, immigration and international trade, has served with honour in the Ontario government and is one of the hardest-working people she has ever met.
     
    She says there have been no specific allegations and the concerns are "baseless."
     
    Chan told the Globe and Mail that CSIS alleged he owned property in China and had asked the then-consul general directly for a visa and that if favours were granted, reciprocation could be expected — allegations he said were not true.
     
    "The body of the article contains a blend of innuendo and half-suggestions," he wrote in his statement Wednesday.
     
    "Although there are no specific allegations, provocative words like treason and espionage are used for no reason. There is a persistent theme that there is a perceived risk that I am under undue influence and that I am an unwitting dupe of a foreign government. This is offensive and totally false. This personal attack is deeply offensive to me and to my family."
     
    Wynne, who defended Chan the day the article was published, continued to do so Wednesday.
     
    "There are some who may believe that there is something sinister about maintaining deep ties with one's country of origin, or one's culture," the premier wrote in a statement. "I believe the opposite and so do millions of Canadians who have immigrated to Canada."
     
    Chan's spokesman told the newspaper a 2009 delegation to China and discussions about cultural events were the reasons for Chan's frequent contact with the consul general.
     
    Chan accompanied Wynne on a trade mission to China last year. He returned to the country on another trade mission this year focusing on the agri-food sector.
     
    As someone who came to Canada as a young man he is proud of his Chinese heritage but is first and foremost Canadian, Chan said in his statement.
     
    "I owe all the success I have had to this country and, most particularly, to the province of Ontario," he wrote.
     
    "Maintaining deep, meaningful connections with one’s culture, with one’s country of origin, is something millions of Canadians cherish. Our strong, personal ties around the world are a good thing – they are an integral part of the foundation of Canada and Ontario."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Mother Sues Province After One-And-A-Half-Year-Old Infant Daughter Dies In Foster Care

    B.C. Mother Sues Province After  One-And-A-Half-Year-Old Infant Daughter Dies In Foster Care
    Sara-Jane Wiens says her two-month old baby Isabella was taken from her in August 2011 after she was deemed unfit to care for her.Two years later, the one-and-a-half-year-old infant was found dead in the crib of her foster home.

    B.C. Mother Sues Province After One-And-A-Half-Year-Old Infant Daughter Dies In Foster Care

    Vancouver Police Discriminate Against Transgender People: Human Rights Tribunal

    Vancouver Police Discriminate Against Transgender People: Human Rights Tribunal
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. Human Rights Tribunal had determined that Vancouver Police engaged in sex discrimination against transgender people and the department must change its policies.

    Vancouver Police Discriminate Against Transgender People: Human Rights Tribunal

    Accused BC Terrorist John Nuttall Told Undercover Officer He Worried He Was Being Set Up

    Accused BC Terrorist John Nuttall Told Undercover Officer He Worried He Was Being Set Up
    VANCOUVER — Months before being arrested in an elaborate RCMP sting operation, John Nuttall tells an undercover officer he worries that he is being set up by the police.

    Accused BC Terrorist John Nuttall Told Undercover Officer He Worried He Was Being Set Up

    Backcountry Users Warned About Avalanche Conditions In Four Regions Of B.C.

    Backcountry Users Warned About Avalanche Conditions In Four Regions Of B.C.
    The Sea to Sky region, including areas adjacent to but outside the ski-area boundary at Whistler Blackcomb, is also covered.

    Backcountry Users Warned About Avalanche Conditions In Four Regions Of B.C.

    Ex-NHL Tough Guy Rudy Poeschek O Stand Trial On Assault, Driving Charges In Kamloops

    Ex-NHL Tough Guy Rudy Poeschek O Stand Trial On Assault, Driving Charges In Kamloops
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A former National Hockey League enforcer will go to trial in Kamloops, B.C., this May on charges of assault, driving while prohibited and dangerous operation of a motor vehicle. 

    Ex-NHL Tough Guy Rudy Poeschek O Stand Trial On Assault, Driving Charges In Kamloops

    Health Officials Managed To Track Half Of Those Who Flew In On Measles Plane

    Health Officials Managed To Track Half Of Those Who Flew In On Measles Plane
    VANCOUVER — Health authorities in Vancouver have gone to great lengths drawing up a list of all individuals who may have come into contact with two high school students who were diagnosed with measles after flying home from Beijing.

    Health Officials Managed To Track Half Of Those Who Flew In On Measles Plane