Canadian envoy sacking shows \'political interference\': Chinese media

Canadian envoy sacking shows 'political interference': Chinese media

AFP  |  Beijing 

Chinese state-run media on Monday decried the sacking of Canada's to Beijing, who was fired after he suggested that it would be "great" for to release a detained

The former envoy, John McCallum, had raised eyebrows over a series of remarks regarding the case of Huawei's chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, whose arrest has sparked a diplomatic row between and

The resignation, at the request of Justin Trudeau, "reveals political interference", the nationalist tabloid said in an editorial.

is now as "sensitive as a frightened bird", the newspaper said, noting the visceral political reactions to McCallum's comments.

"The truth is that they knew the geopolitics in the case from the very beginning, but were afraid to point them out," it said.

"As a Chinese folk saying goes, 'You cannot live the life of a whore and expect a monument to your chastity'," the wrote.

"is a country worthy of respect, but some Canadians... are against moral righteousness while deceiving themselves to believe that they can be honoured as moral models." Meng was arrested in December at the behest of the United States, where she is wanted for violations of Iranian sanctions.

US authorities plan to formally file for her extradition by a January 30 deadline.

has reacted furiously to Meng's detention. In apparent retaliation, two Canadian citizens have been detained on national security grounds and another was sentenced to death for drug trafficking.

McCallum, a former senior cabinet minister, said in front of Chinese-language media in last week that he believed the US extradition request was seriously flawed, comments which he later walked back.

But on Friday, he told newspaper that it would be "great for Canada" if the US dropped its extradition request, prompting Trudeau to demand McCallum's resignation.

Ottawa has repeatedly stressed the case is not politically motivated and the justice system is fair but Chinese media has cast Meng's arrest as part of an assault on the development on the country's

In the past year, a number of Western countries close to the US have barred products in their infrastructure citing security concerns.

observed: "McCallum was merely stating the truth when he observed that Meng (Wanzhou) has a strong case against extradition, which he rightly said was politically motivated.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, January 28 2019. 13:30 IST