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Canada 91Ƶwill be there91Ƶ to help 2 Michaels after their detention in China: Trudeau

Kovrig and Spavor were both convicted of spying in 2021 in closed Chinese courts
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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is pushing back on the notion that Canada91Ƶs willingness to help two men who were detained in China is an acknowledgement they engaged in espionage on Ottawa91Ƶs behalf. Michael Spavor, centre left, and Michael Kovrig, centre left, receive a standing ovation in the House of Commons prior to U.S. President Joe Biden91Ƶs address of Parliament, in Ottawa, Friday, March 24, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is pushing back on the notion that Canada91Ƶs willingness to help two citizens who were detained in China is an acknowledgement they engaged in espionage on Ottawa91Ƶs behalf.

The federal government will be there to help Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor rebuild their lives after they were arbitrarily imprisoned in China for three years, Trudeau said Thursday.

Canada has assisted Kovrig and Spavor from the beginning because China chose to use them as pawns in geopolitical games, Trudeau told a news conference in Toronto.

91ƵWe91Ƶve been there to support the two Michaels, who went through unimaginable difficulties, being arbitrarily detained by China,91Ƶ he said. 91ƵWe will continue to be there to support them.91Ƶ

He said China arrested the Canadians for political reasons, adding there was 91Ƶabsolutely no justification, no reason, no excuse for them to do that.91Ƶ

Trudeau91Ƶs comments came a day after John Phillips, a lawyer for Spavor, indicated his client had reached a settlement with the federal government over the detention.

Phillips said in an email that the matter between Spavor and the government had been 91Ƶresolved.91Ƶ

Trudeau declined to say Thursday whether Ottawa had provided compensation to Kovrig, citing a need for confidentiality.

Canada arrested Meng Wanzhou, a senior executive of Chinese firm Huawei Technologies, in December 2018 at the request of the United States, where she faced charges related to American sanctions against Iran.

The move clearly angered Beijing, and Kovrig and Spavor 91Ƶ two Canadians working in China 91Ƶ were arrested soon after on accusations of endangering national security, a move widely seen as retaliation against Ottawa.

Kovrig and Spavor were both convicted of spying in 2021 in closed Chinese courts. Canada and many allies said the process amounted to arbitrary detention on bogus charges in an unaccountable justice system.

The U.S. worked out a deferred prosecution agreement in Meng91Ƶs case, allowing for her release, and Beijing permitted the two Michaels, as they came to be known, to fly home in September 2021.

Jim Bronskill, The Canadian Press

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