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Canadian man sentenced to death in first instance

Protester burns Chinese flag outside Huawei CFO's court hearing

Posted : 2019-03-07 13:51 Updated : 2019-03-07 16:41

At her December bail hearings, the demonstrators were almost all pro-Meng and pro-Huawei, decrying her detention as a political pursuit by the US, aided and abetted by Canadian lackeys. "Free Meng", and "We love you Huawei", had read the placards waved by a mostly Mandarin-speaking crowd, some waving Chinese flags.

The protests mirrored Beijing's unabated fury at Meng's arrest to face US criminal charges of bank fraud, conspiracy and obstruction related to alleged breaches of US sanctions on Iran.

But on Wednesday a different scene was unfolding.

There were knots of pro-Meng protesters, but others were waving posters of Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, the two Canadians who have been detained by China and accused of working together to steal state secrets.

"Boycott Huawei" read one banner. "Extradite Meng", and "Release Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig", read others.

The spoken language of choice was Cantonese (although a handful of white protesters were on hand too). The flags of choice were Canadian.


http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/world/2019/03/672_264940.html


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▲ Kuang Yang burns a Chinese flag to protest human rights abuses, outside British Columbia Supreme Court, in Vancouver on March 6, 2019, as Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou appears in court appearance. AFP-Yonhap


9273262ffbde4c16bcf5a2638954cee1.jpg

▲ Max Wang protests Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou's court appearance at British Columbia Supreme Court, in Vancouver on March 6, 2019. AFP-Yonhap


d3c708d0b81b412d885153049cf50bf8.jpg

▲ Protesters hold photos of Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, who are being detained by China, outside British Columbia Supreme Court, in Vancouver, on March 6, 2019, as Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou appears in court. AFP-Yonhap


Meng Wanzhou seems toasted.

Extradition is a fair deal.:smokin:

On the other hand, by getting the Julian Assange deal, that is delaying for a decade or more the extradition, and being locked behind four walls all that time, without really ending the prosecutions is worse.

Indeed, when Assange and Meng finally decide to no longer postpone the inevitable, after having effectively lost years of freedom, they would still have to serve years of prison sentence in the U.S. anyway!

Be real men, and have the courage to face your judges! If one knows of having done no wrongdoings, then there is no need fear the justice!

:cool:
Chinese protests in Canada doesn't do shit. It's not even on the news.
 
Protester burns Chinese flag outside Huawei CFO's court hearing

Posted : 2019-03-07 13:51 Updated : 2019-03-07 16:41

At her December bail hearings, the demonstrators were almost all pro-Meng and pro-Huawei, decrying her detention as a political pursuit by the US, aided and abetted by Canadian lackeys. "Free Meng", and "We love you Huawei", had read the placards waved by a mostly Mandarin-speaking crowd, some waving Chinese flags.

The protests mirrored Beijing's unabated fury at Meng's arrest to face US criminal charges of bank fraud, conspiracy and obstruction related to alleged breaches of US sanctions on Iran.

But on Wednesday a different scene was unfolding.

There were knots of pro-Meng protesters, but others were waving posters of Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, the two Canadians who have been detained by China and accused of working together to steal state secrets.

"Boycott Huawei" read one banner. "Extradite Meng", and "Release Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig", read others.

The spoken language of choice was Cantonese (although a handful of white protesters were on hand too). The flags of choice were Canadian.


http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/world/2019/03/672_264940.html


optimize

▲ Kuang Yang burns a Chinese flag to protest human rights abuses, outside British Columbia Supreme Court, in Vancouver on March 6, 2019, as Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou appears in court appearance. AFP-Yonhap


9273262ffbde4c16bcf5a2638954cee1.jpg

▲ Max Wang protests Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou's court appearance at British Columbia Supreme Court, in Vancouver on March 6, 2019. AFP-Yonhap


d3c708d0b81b412d885153049cf50bf8.jpg

▲ Protesters hold photos of Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, who are being detained by China, outside British Columbia Supreme Court, in Vancouver, on March 6, 2019, as Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou appears in court. AFP-Yonhap


Meng Wanzhou seems toasted.

Extradition is a fair deal.:smokin:

On the other hand, by getting the Julian Assange deal, that is delaying for a decade or more the extradition, and being locked behind four walls all that time, without really ending the prosecutions is worse.

Indeed, when Assange and Meng finally decide to no longer postpone the inevitable, after having effectively lost years of freedom, they would still have to serve years of prison sentence in the U.S. anyway!

Be real men, and have the courage to face your judges! If one knows of having done no wrongdoings, then there is no need fear the justice!

:cool:

Speak like tough guy, what will happen if same thing happen to you? You came to some country for some business, suddenly get arrest and interrogated hours long, get sentenced and without knowing anything wrong you'll noticed that you will extradited to US, I'll ask you wise guy, what will you DO ?
 
Chinese protests in Canada doesn't do shit. It's not even on the news.
These guys are cowards. They think they can do all they want with the Canadian democracy behind them. But will squeal like a rat when Justice is served.
Fking waste piece of shit these Drug Smuggler Sympathizer.
 
:omghaha: @ these losers. How it must torment them every day to see China growing richer and stronger. Deport these rejects!
95c218930e2d45b1ab1f0a8d159ead01.jpg

^ Obviously a violent criminal hoodlum. Out he goes!
9273262ffbde4c16bcf5a2638954cee1.jpg

^ LMAO, this sad-sack's face looks like the before picture of a Viagra commercial. Make his sorry a*s stateless!
d3c708d0b81b412d885153049cf50bf8.jpg

^ Oh, my sides! My poor sides can't take anymore :rofl:
Not even whiteys care about their spies Kovrig and Spavor anymore. It's just these Falun Gong failures that have been wearing the same ridiculous sunglasses since the 90's. They claim China kills them for their organs - seriously, look at these bums. Who wants defective organs from these wretches? Out. They. Go!
 
:omghaha: @ these losers. How it must torment them every day to see China growing richer and stronger. Deport these rejects!
95c218930e2d45b1ab1f0a8d159ead01.jpg

^ Obviously a violent criminal hoodlum. Out he goes!
9273262ffbde4c16bcf5a2638954cee1.jpg

^ LMAO, this sad-sack's face looks like the before picture of a Viagra commercial. Make his sorry a*s stateless!
d3c708d0b81b412d885153049cf50bf8.jpg

^ Oh, my sides! My poor sides can't take anymore :rofl:
Not even whiteys care about their spies Kovrig and Spavor anymore. It's just these Falun Gong failures that have been wearing the same ridiculous sunglasses since the 90's. They claim China kills them for their organs - seriously, look at these bums. Who wants defective organs from these wretches? Out. They. Go!
If you read the comments on CBC News, most white people who post were thankful that China is giving the dude a death sentence
 
Speak like tough guy, what will happen if same thing happen to you? You came to some country for some business, suddenly get arrest and interrogated hours long, get sentenced and without knowing anything wrong you'll noticed that you will extradited to US, I'll ask you wise guy, what will you DO ?
U guys Cnese happy to see Soviet collapse, so no, u r US's target.

Thats the price CN has to pay when making Soviet collapse. Its never be easy when being US's target. CN will collapse like Soviet.
 
Protester burns Chinese flag outside Huawei CFO's court hearing

Posted : 2019-03-07 13:51 Updated : 2019-03-07 16:41

At her December bail hearings, the demonstrators were almost all pro-Meng and pro-Huawei, decrying her detention as a political pursuit by the US, aided and abetted by Canadian lackeys. "Free Meng", and "We love you Huawei", had read the placards waved by a mostly Mandarin-speaking crowd, some waving Chinese flags.

The protests mirrored Beijing's unabated fury at Meng's arrest to face US criminal charges of bank fraud, conspiracy and obstruction related to alleged breaches of US sanctions on Iran.

But on Wednesday a different scene was unfolding.

There were knots of pro-Meng protesters, but others were waving posters of Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, the two Canadians who have been detained by China and accused of working together to steal state secrets.

"Boycott Huawei" read one banner. "Extradite Meng", and "Release Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig", read others.

The spoken language of choice was Cantonese (although a handful of white protesters were on hand too). The flags of choice were Canadian.


http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/world/2019/03/672_264940.html


optimize

▲ Kuang Yang burns a Chinese flag to protest human rights abuses, outside British Columbia Supreme Court, in Vancouver on March 6, 2019, as Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou appears in court appearance. AFP-Yonhap


9273262ffbde4c16bcf5a2638954cee1.jpg

▲ Max Wang protests Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou's court appearance at British Columbia Supreme Court, in Vancouver on March 6, 2019. AFP-Yonhap


d3c708d0b81b412d885153049cf50bf8.jpg

▲ Protesters hold photos of Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, who are being detained by China, outside British Columbia Supreme Court, in Vancouver, on March 6, 2019, as Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou appears in court. AFP-Yonhap


Meng Wanzhou seems toasted.

Extradition is a fair deal.:smokin:

On the other hand, by getting the Julian Assange deal, that is delaying for a decade or more the extradition, and being locked behind four walls all that time, without really ending the prosecutions is worse.

Indeed, when Assange and Meng finally decide to no longer postpone the inevitable, after having effectively lost years of freedom, they would still have to serve years of prison sentence in the U.S. anyway!

Be real men, and have the courage to face your judges! If one knows of having done no wrongdoings, then there is no need fear the justice!

:cool:
You mean like this!
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Time is running out.

Meng Wanzhou has no other choice. But can she rival Carlos Ghosn in pluck? The only way back to China is to escape, as by forfeiting her own fate to other government, she will certainly end up in a U.S. jail sooner than later.
:ph34r:

Carlos Ghosn with the wind: Internet sleuths have some ideas on how bailed ex-Nissan boss fled Japan

Jan 1, 2020

BEIRUT/TOKYO – How did Carlos Ghosn do it?

The former head of Nissan Motor Co. and Renault SA, who was awaiting the first of two trials in Tokyo, somehow evaded almost round-the-clock manned and video surveillance and heavy restrictions on his freedom of movement to flee to Lebanon.

From there, Ghosn released an email Tuesday decrying the “injustice and political persecution” of the Japanese judicial system. The 65-year-old faced charges of financial misconduct and raiding corporate resources for personal gain, allegations he denies.

Soon after he resurfaced, the internet lit up with unconfirmed reports and theories of how Ghosn, now an international fugitive, pulled off an escape befitting a Hollywood thriller — one that will be very hard for Japanese authorities to live down. There are still more questions than answers.

In one speculative account, which cited no sources, Lebanese television station MTV reported that Ghosn smuggled himself out in a large musical instrument box after a Christmas band visited his residence in Tokyo. He was then shipped out of the country and later entered Lebanon from Turkey on a private plane.

A detailed report in the French daily Le Monde, citing unidentified sources, said Ghosn’s wife, Carole, organized the escape with the help of her brothers and their contacts in Turkey. After leaving Tokyo, Ghosn took a private jet from a small airport in Japan to Turkey, and from there entered Lebanon with an ID card, landing in Beirut with Carole. He may have decided to flee because of new information Japanese authorities could have obtained from a Swiss bank and from offshore centers including Dubai, the newspaper reported.

The Lebanese newspaper Annahar, by contrast, reported that Ghosn entered the country with a French passport. The former industry heavyweight has Lebanese, French and Brazilian citizenship, though all his passports had been taken from him. Meanwhile, a report that Ghosn met with Lebanese President Michel Aoun was denied by an official at the presidency.

French newspaper Les Echos said Ghosn may have left Japan under a false identity with a forged passport, after boarding a private plane from a smaller airport where he would be less likely to be recognized.

The U.K.’s Guardian said Lebanon officials were instructed by political leaders to ignore arrival formalities for Ghosn at Beirut’s airport, citing a senior figure in the country’s ruling class that the newspaper didn’t identify.

The French foreign ministry, for its part, said it doesn’t know how Ghosn made his escape. Lebanon’s foreign ministry said in a statement that Ghosn entered the country legally and it was unaware how he fled Japan and arrived in Beirut.

On social media, would-be sleuths posted private-jet flight information on aircraft that left Japan for Istanbul the same day that Ghosn may have left the country.

Ghosn’s vanishing act has been trending on Twitter and inspiring a fair amount of word play, as in Ghosn with the Wind and Ghosn, Ghosn Gone.

Ghosn is expected to give a press conference from Lebanon in his new home after the holidays. In the meantime, red-faced Japanese law enforcement and customs officials have some explaining to do.

http://web.archive.org/web/20200101...euths-ideas-bailed-ex-nissan-boss-fled-japan/
http://archive.ph/n7ZvD

:police:

Main hurdles

• 5G base stations: skeletal recognition and tracking in real time, tracking of any electronic devices' signal
• CCTV cam, streetcam, airportcam, dashcams, etc: gait recognition, and facial recognition; facial recognition needed for biometric identification at the airport
• Fingerprint recognition: needed for biometric identification at the airport
• Electronic tagging

But as a heiress of a telecommunications equipment and consumer electronics empire, should be doable.
:triniti:



:smokin:
 
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Previous Commentaries

Meng Wanzhou's lawyer is Allan Doolittle. The last time someone famous shared that name, was the U.S. colonel who bombed Tokyo back in 1942, with no significant military gain but that has costed 250,000 death among the Chinese civilian who sheltered the U.S. airmen, and who suffered the murderous genocidal repression of the Japanese military during a three-month terror campaign.

Meng Wanzhou seems toasted.

Meng Wanzhou seems toasted.

Extradition is a fair deal.:smokin:

On the other hand, by getting the Julian Assange deal, that is delaying for a decade or more the extradition, and being locked behind four walls all that time, without really ending the prosecutions is worse.

Indeed, when Assange and Meng finally decide to no longer postpone the inevitable, after having effectively lost years of freedom, they would still have to serve years of prison sentence in the U.S. anyway!

Be real men, and have the courage to face your judges! If one knows of having done no wrongdoings, then there is no need fear the justice!

:cool:

Time is running out.

Meng Wanzhou has no other choice. But can she rival Carlos Ghosn in pluck? The only way back to China is to escape, as by forfeiting her own fate to other government, she will certainly end up in a U.S. jail sooner than later.
:ph34r:


New Commentary

From 1 December 2018 when Meng Wanzhou was arrested by Canadian anthorities, she has been in "lockdown" or house arrest for 840 Days (as of 23rd March 2021)!

Was it worth it?

Because once extradited to the U.S., she will have to waste new rounds of years of prison behind bars. Only to be released when hairs all turned white!

Indeed, time is running out!

With the new U.S. Biden administration, things have changed, for Russia, North Korea and China!

1. U.S.-Russia relations

19 March 2021

In an ABC News interview broadcast Wednesday that prompted Russia to recall its Washington ambassador for consultations, Biden said “I do” when asked if he believed Putin was a killer.

In his ABC comments, Biden also described Putin as having no soul, and said he would pay a price for alleged Russian meddling in the November 2020 U.S. presidential election, something the Kremlin denies.

http://web.archive.org/web/20210319060107/https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2021/03/19/world/putin-biden-killer-accusation/
https://archive.ph/Ov9xA


2. U.S.-North Korea relations

North Korean businessman Mun Chol Myong in US court after extradition from Malaysia

• Court papers indicate US authorities have indicted others in the case, including ‘Chinese co-conspirator’ firms and individuals

• Mun’s extradition has sparked a diplomatic dispute between his home country and Malaysia

Published: 7:44am, 23 Mar, 2021

A North Korean businessman accused by the United States of laundering money to circumvent US and UN sanctions intended to curb his country’s nuclear weapons programme appeared in a US court on Monday after extradition from Malaysia.

The US Justice Department said Mun Chol Myong, who it said was affiliated with North Korea’s primary intelligence organisation, the Reconnaissance General Bureau, was the first North Korean ever extradited to the United States.

It said Mun appeared in federal court in Washington, where he was indicted in May 2019 on six counts of money laundering, including conspiracy to commit money laundering.

Mun was arrested in Malaysia in 2019 after the United States accused him of laundering funds through front companies and issuing fraudulent documents to support illicit shipments to North Korea. He denied the allegations, saying they were politically motivated.

His lawyer, public defender Michelle Peterson, declined to comment on the indictment, which was unsealed on Monday.

North Korea said on Friday it would sever diplomatic relations with Malaysia after the extradition.

It called it a “nefarious act and unpardonably heavy crime” by Malaysian authorities, who had “offered our citizen as a sacrifice of the US hostile move in defiance of the acknowledged international laws”.

North Korea warned that Washington, “the backstage manipulator and main culprit of this incident”, would be “made to pay a due price”.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said last week the Biden administration would complete a review of US policy toward North Korea in the next few weeks.

The court papers indicated US authorities had indicted others in the case, including “Chinese co-conspirator” companies and individuals whose names were redacted.

The indictment said Mun had relocated to Malaysia from Singapore, where he had been employed by a firm called Sinsar Trading, which procured sanctioned luxury goods like liquor and tobacco.

It valued his alleged money-laundering transactions at over US$1.5 million.

John Demers, assistant attorney general for national security, said Mun’s actions were aimed at evading both US and UN sanctions.

“We will continue to use the long reach of our laws to protect the American people from sanctions evasion and other national security threats,” he said in a statement.

Alan Kohler, assistant director of the FBI’s counter-intelligence division, said bringing overseas defendants to justice was one of its biggest challenges, especially in the case of North Korea.

“We hope he will be the first of many,” he said.

https://www.scmp.com/news/asia/east-asia/article/3126520/north-korean-businessman-mun-chol-myong-us-court-after?

3. U.S.-China relations

This means that the new U.S. administration has decided to go very tough against its old time adversaries.

Russia, North Korea being the firsts. Iran, Turkey to follow soon.

How could Meng Wanzhou not end-up being extradited when the first ever North Korean has now appeared before a U.S. court?

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:cool:🚬
 

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