Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Huawei case | Meng Wanzhou accuses Canada of destroying insulting evidence

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Alan Binder
Alan Binder
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(Vancouver) A Huawei executive threatened extradition to the US on Thursday and accused Canada of “destroying evidence” by deleting emails and texts from a former police officer involved in his arrest in late 2018 in Vancouver.


France Media

Lawyers for Meng Wanzhou, the financial director of the Chinese telecom giant, have been trying for months to prove his rights were violated during his arrest, hoping to block extradition proceedings to the United States that should end in mid-May.

MI am Meng was arrested at 1is being December 2018 at Vancouver Airport at the request of the United States. The US judge accuses him of circumventing US sanctions against Iran by lying to HSBC about the ties between Huawei and its subsidiary doing business in this country.

In new documents revealed in Vancouver court on Thursday, Mr.I am Meng claimed that Canada violated its client’s rights by erasing emails, texts and documents from the computer of Sgt. Bin Zhang, who had participated in the arrest of Mr. Bin Zhang.I am Meng, after leaving the Canadian Federal Police in 2019.

They suspect that Mr. Zhang then sent an email to the US FBI that illegally contained passwords for his electronic devices seized at the airport, a claim the attorney general denied.

The prosecution responded, “There is no evidence that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) have systematically destroyed the evidence.”

Mr. Zhang, who was questioned under oath, denied having passed on this classified information to the US Federal Police. However, he refused to testify himself before a Vancouver judge, a position that is “unjustifiable” according to the master’s defense.I am Meng.

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Mona Duckett, a defense attorney, confirmed Thursday that Canadian customs officers and police have no legal reason to obtain passwords for phones and other electronic devices from Meng Wanzhou.

According to them, they did so illegally to allow the FBI to collect suspicious information, which in their view should lead to the cancellation of the entire procedure.

Relations between Ottawa and Beijing have been in an unprecedented crisis since the arrest of former Canadian diplomat Michael Coffrig and his compatriot Michael Spavor, accused of spying, a few days after the arrest of Meng Wanzhou.

The Canadians are due to be tried in China from Friday for Mr. Spavor and Monday for Mr. Covrej.

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