Death Penalty Upheld in China for Canadian Man

Country appears to be pressuring Canada to release Huawei exec
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Aug 10, 2021 2:02 AM CDT
China Upholds Canadian's Death Sentence
A man rides a scooter across an intersection near the Canadian Embassy in Beijing, Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2021.   (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

A Chinese court on Tuesday rejected a Canadian drug convict's appeal of a death sentence in what appeared to be an effort to step up pressure on Canada to release a detained executive of tech giant Huawei, the AP reports. The Canadian government condemned the ruling and appealed to China to grant clemency to Robert Schellenberg. His sentence was abruptly increased from a 15-year prison term to death after the Dec. 1, 2018, arrest of Meng Wanzhou on US charges related to possible dealings with Iran. In separate cases, two other Canadians, a former diplomat and an entrepreneur, were arrested on spying charges as China demanded Meng's release. The Higher People’s Court of Liaoning Province in the northeast rejected Schellenberg's appeal and sent the case to the Chinese supreme court for review, as is required by law before death sentences can be carried out.

“We condemn the verdict in the strongest possible terms and call on China to grant Robert clemency,” the Canadian ambassador to Beijing, Dominic Barton, told reporters. He criticized the penalty as “cruel and inhumane.” “His retrial and subsequent sentence were arbitrary," Barton said by phone from the northeastern city of Shenyang, where he attended the appeals court hearing. Schellenberg was convicted of smuggling 448 pounds of methamphetamine, according to the court. He was sentenced in November 2018 to 15 years and resentenced to death in January 2019 after a one-day retrial. The United States wants the Huawei executive, Meng, who is the company founder's daughter, extradited to face charges she lied to banks in Hong Kong in connection with dealings with Iran that might violate trade sanctions. A Canadian judge will hear final arguments in the next few weeks over whether she should be extradited. She has been living under house arrest in Vancouver.

(More China stories.)

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