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CBC Report (Canada): Leaked Memo Indicates Chinese Embassy Violated Diplomatic Protocol (Photo)
(Clearwisdom.net) (Minghui correspondent Ying Xin from Ottawa) On April 9,
2007, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) broadcast in its morning news
that Zhang Jiyan made public a memo of the Chinese Embassy, which shows that a
diplomat with the surname Huang ordered his colleagues to organize Chinese
students and citizens in Canada and Canadian Chinese to interfere with NTDTV's
application to the Canadian Radio and Telecommunications Commission (CTRC). At the rally on March 30 supporting 20 million withdrawals from the CCP,
Zhang Jiyan announced her defection from the Chinese Embassy. Canadian MP Rob
Anders (left) shook hands with Zhang Jiyan (right) to support her. The report stated that a leaked copy of an embassy memo suggests China may
have interfered with an application to the Canadian Radio and Telecommunications
Commission. NTDTV applied to the CRTC for a broadcast license in 2005. The
leaked memo proposes using Chinese students in Canada to mount a campaign
opposing the application. The report stated that Zhang Jiyan is the wife of a Chinese diplomat and in
recent years a secret Falun Gong practitioner. When her husband was notified
that he was being transferred from Ottawa back to China she says that she fled
the embassy, but not before copying at least one document. In it a senior diplomat named Huang instructs a junior colleague to quote
"knock down a broadcast application by the New Tang Dynasty Television to
the CRTC." Huang instructs his colleague to organize Chinese students studying in
Canada, Chinese citizens living in Canada and Chinese Canadians to lobby against
the application. In an interview with CBC, Zhang suggested that Canada's Chinese community
needs NTDTV because the established Chinese media kowtows to the Chinese
government. She said most other Chinese media companies are afraid of the
authorities in their country and stay away from any news related to Falun Gong. A former Canadian diplomat, Charles Burton, said that asking foreigners to
influence the decision of a Canadian commission process clearly violates the
rules of international diplomacy. "If they are asking Canadians of Chinese origin to lobby on behalf of
the embassy. That certainly crosses the line." In the 1990s Charles Burton was a senior diplomat at the Canadian Embassy in
Beijing. "The Chinese embassy doesn't have any right to interfere in domestic
Canadian affairs. Nor does the Canadian embassy in Beijing have any right to
tell the Chinese government what sort of decisions they should make with regard
to weather or not a TV station is allowed to be shown on Chinese cable." Burton said if the memo is authentic, the Chinese campaign would have
violated a principle of diplomacy that an embassy does not interfere in the
internal affairs of another country. Posting date: 4/12/2007
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