The diplomatic crisis which poisoned relations between Beijing and Ottawa resurfaces: one of the two Canadians imprisoned for almost three years in China accuses his fellow prisoner of being responsible for his arrest and demands millions from the Canadian government.
In December 2018, Canada arrested, at the request of Washington, the financial director of the telecoms giant Huawei, Meng Wanzhou. And a few days later, Canadians Michael Spavor, a businessman, and ex-diplomat Michael Kovrig, were arrested in China, a measure then perceived as retaliation.
Michael Spavor now blames his compatriot Michael Kovrig, to whom he had provided information on North Korea without knowing that it would be shared with Canada and its intelligence partners, for being behind their incarceration , according to information from the weekly Globe and Mail which cites anonymous sources.
More than two years after his return to Canada, Michael Spavor is demanding millions of dollars in compensation from the Canadian government.
“These allegations are baseless,” Michael Kovrig told AFP on Monday.
Maintaining the idea that one or the other of the two Michaels was involved in espionage activities “only perpetuates a false narrative” which would explain their detention according to China, declared for its part the Canadian government.
Michael Kovrig “was not a spy,” added the Foreign Ministry, which did not confirm whether negotiations with Mr. Spavor were underway.
Beijing, however, declared that Mr. Spavor’s assertion “fully highlights Canada’s hypocrisy,” according to a statement in Chinese sent to AFP on Monday by its embassy in Ottawa.
“We advise Canada to face the facts and think deeply about its own mistakes, rather than blaming others and continuing to attack and discredit China and mislead the public,” the embassy added.
Despite the release in 2021 of Meng Wanzhou and those called the “two Michaels”, tensions persist between the two countries, with Beijing in particular reproaching Ottawa for its alignment with Washington’s Chinese policy and Canadian authorities suspecting China of interfering in his public affairs.