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Ottawa Citizen: Canada limited in helping woman arrested in China Mohammed Adam Canada wants an urgent explanation
from the Chinese government on the
arrest and detention of a Montreal
woman during a visit to her parents in
southern China. But the Canadian government has
limited options to help 35-year-old
Ying Zhu because she is not a Canadian
citizen, says a spokeswoman for the
Department of Foreign Affairs. Mrs.
Zhu is a permanent resident of Canada. "The Department of Foreign Affairs has
been informed of the arrest, and the
Canadian Consular General in the city of
Guangzhou has been instructed to
contact the Chinese authorities to
establish where Mrs. Zhu is and why she
has been detained," Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Marie-Christine
Lilkoff said yesterday. "Since Mrs. Zhu is not a Canadian citizen, the Canadian government
can only request the co-operation of the Chinese authorities. We
won't have access to her." Ms. Lilkoff explained that under the Vienna Convention, which
guides international relations and diplomacy, countries are allowed
access to their citizens when they are arrested in a foreign country.
That right however, does not extend to permanent residents or
landed immigrants like Mrs. Zhu. Ms. Lilkoff said based on past experience, Foreign Affairs has
issued travel advisories warning Canadian travellers to be very
careful if they visit China on Chinese travel documents. They are
warned that it would be very difficult to give them consular
assistance if they get into trouble because they are regarded as
Chinese citizens. Mrs. Zhu disappeared on May 10 during a trip to visit her parents in
the southern Chinese province of Guangdong. Mrs. Zhu's friends said she was arrested near the city of Guangzhou,
a two-hour train ride from Hong Kong. They have not heard from
her since. "I am really worried about her safety, I am really anxious. I know
how the Chinese regime treats Falun Gong practitioners," Mrs.
Zhu's travelling companion, Zhili Li, told reporters through an
interpreter in Montreal yesterday. Ms. Li said Mrs. Zhu had planned to visit her husband and parents in
Guangzhou after arriving by train. Ms. Li planned to visit her own
family in Beijing and the two were scheduled to take different trains
from Hong Kong. "She was waiting for her train. That is the last time we saw each
other," Ms. Li said. Ms. Li was stopped at the mainland Chinese border and deported,
but Mrs. Zhu appears to have been arrested after crossing the
border, Ms. Li said. Prior to the trip, Mrs. Zhu joined a pro-Falun Gong demonstration
in Hong Kong. On Thursday, the Hong Kong Human Rights Information Centre
confirmed that Mrs. Zhu had been arrested and is one of tens of
thousands of Chinese citizens being detained for practising Falun
Gong. This is the second time in a year a Montrealer has been arrested for
ties to Falun Gong. Last summer, former Montrealer KunLun Zhang
-- who holds both Chinese and Canadian citizenship, was arrested
for practising Falun Gong and imprisoned in a labour camp. He had
been in China since 1996. He was released earlier this year. With files from Reuters , on the eve of a Team Canada trade mission to China after pressure
from the international media and pressure from Foreign Affairs
Minister John Manley. Ms. Lilkoff said the Canadian government has on many occasions,
expressed concern about the suppression of freedom in China and
will continue to do so. She would not comment on what the
government will do if the Chinese government refuse to cooperate
on Mrs. Zhu's whereabouts. "This has just happened. We are not there yet," she said.
Posting date: 5/27/2001
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