Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Winery Owners' Arrest A Warning For Canadians Doing Business In China: Daughter

The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2017 12:43 PM
    OTTAWA — The daughter of two Canadian winery owners being held by Chinese authorities over an alleged customs valuation dispute says the case should serve as a warning for other Canadians hoping to do business in China.
     
    Amy Chang is in Ottawa this week pleading with federal politicians for help in getting her parents released from custody in Shanghai, where the two were arrested in March 2016 while visiting their business suppliers and agents.
     
    John Chang and Lan-Fed (Allison) Lu, who own two wineries in British Columbia and one in Ontario, were put on trial behind closed doors last Friday at the Shanghai High People’s Court on charges of smuggling.
     
    They are accused of under-reporting the value of the wine they export to China.
     
    For their 23-year-old daughter, it's been a nightmare that she hopes Prime Minister Justin Trudeau can bring to an end.
     
    "This should never have happened," Chang said Wednesday as she prepared to meet separately in Ottawa with Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer and NDP Leader Tom Mulcair to press her case.
     
    "There should not have been a trial; there shouldn't even be a conviction."
     
    Chang, who was in a different Chinese province and immediately fled to Taiwan when she heard of her parents being arrested, said she had yet to hear about the outcome of their trial.
     
    But she said there is no justifiable reason why the Chinese government has criminalized a commercial dispute, and she's hoping the prime minister can sway Chinese authorities to drop the case against them.
     
    "If this is an issue regarding undervaluation, then they can let me know and we can deal with this diplomatically," said Chang, who along with more than 60 employees is now operating her family's business, the Lulu Island Winery based in Richmond, B.C.
     
    "There's no need to have Canadian citizens detained overseas and imprisoned."
     
    Trudeau, who has been pushing for closer trading ties with China, was unavailable to meet Wednesday with Chang, having just returned from Europe. Still, Chang said she hoped for a meeting with him later in the week.
     
    A Global Affairs spokeswoman said the department is closely following the case.
     
    "We have raised our concerns at a high level with Chinese authorities," Jocelyn Sweet said in an email. "Canadian officials are in contact with the relevant Chinese authorities, and are providing consular assistance to Mr. Chang, Ms. Lu, and their family."
     
    Chang said that assistance has amounted to one visit every three months from Canadian consular officials in China.
     
    The department also offered Chang a meeting with Omar Alghabra, the parliamentary secretary to Global Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland.
     
    Lulu Island Winery has appealed to the government, arguing that the detention is a violation of China's international trade obligations under the World Trade Organization's valuation agreement, and therefore a matter of Canadian national interest.
     
    The winery has also called on Canada's international trade and justice ministers to demand their Chinese counterparts secure permission for Chang and his wife to return to Canada while the customs dispute is resolved.
     
    Chang said she has only been able to communicate with her father through a lawyer in Shanghai. He has been incarcerated with no direct access to his family, and both his physical and mental health have been deteriorating since his arrest, she said.
     
    Her mother, Lu, was also initially held in custody but was released in January on the condition she not leave China. Lu's Canadian passport was confiscated and she must report regularly to Chinese authorities.
     
    The Chinese embassy in Ottawa did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadians Face Some Tax Changes In The New Year After A Busy 2016

    Canadians Face Some Tax Changes In The New Year After A Busy 2016
     Canadians will ring in the new year with a number of tax changes that will affect the bottom line of federal and provincial governments. Here's a look at some of them:

    Canadians Face Some Tax Changes In The New Year After A Busy 2016

    Toronto Man Arrested At U.S. Border With 25 Guns Has Case Put Over To January

    Toronto Man Arrested At U.S. Border With 25 Guns Has Case Put Over To January
    Toronto man Thanh Viet Pham appeared in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu court to face charges of importing and exporting firearms at the Canada-U.S. border in Quebec.

    Toronto Man Arrested At U.S. Border With 25 Guns Has Case Put Over To January

    Toronto Cop Charged After Cocaine Allegedly Found In Wallet By Another Officer

    Toronto Cop Charged After Cocaine Allegedly Found In Wallet By Another Officer
    Toronto police say the detective was at a courthouse in the city's east-end on Sept. 19 as a witness to a matter related to his duties.

    Toronto Cop Charged After Cocaine Allegedly Found In Wallet By Another Officer

    'There's A Big Spider' Makes List Of Worst 911 Calls Of 2016

    'There's A Big Spider' Makes List Of Worst 911 Calls Of 2016
    E-Comm call-takers Jim Beland and Chris Faris say in a news release that too many people think of 911 as an information hotline rather than an emergency link to police, fire and ambulance services. 

    'There's A Big Spider' Makes List Of Worst 911 Calls Of 2016

    Volunteer Firefighter Charged In Series Of Summer Nova Scotia Blazes

    Volunteer Firefighter Charged In Series Of Summer Nova Scotia Blazes
    FLORENCE, N.S. — A volunteer firefighter has been charged with arson, the third firefighter accused in a series of blazes in Cape Breton last summer.

    Volunteer Firefighter Charged In Series Of Summer Nova Scotia Blazes

    Crash In Victoria Leads To Attempted Murder Charges After Pedestrian Hit

    Crash In Victoria Leads To Attempted Murder Charges After Pedestrian Hit
    Victoria police say a man alleged to have intentionally driven his vehicle at two people has been charged with two counts of attempted murder and dangerous operation of a motor vehicle.

    Crash In Victoria Leads To Attempted Murder Charges After Pedestrian Hit