Carney Urges Release of Hong Kong Democracy Activist and Publisher Jimmy Lai
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Prime Minister Mark Carney is calling for the release of Hong Kong democracy activist and publisher Jimmy Lai, who’s been imprisoned by Beijing-controlled authorities in Hong Kong since the end of 2020.
“We support the freedom of the press, and we would urge the release of Mr. Lai,” Carney said Oct. 16 during questions following an unrelated announcement in Etobicoke, Ont. “I’m making the point on humanitarian grounds and our support for, as I say, support for freedom of the press, including in Hong Kong.”
Lai suffers from diabetes and is facing potential life in prison with his trial set to proceed to closing submissions in the near future. While his six colleagues at Apple Daily eventually pleaded guilty after time in detention, Lai says he is innocent of all charges and has been kept largely in solitary confinement for the past five years.
Responding to questions about whether Canada will seek to offer Lai citizenship, Carney said Oct. 16, “We first and foremost take responsibility for the citizens of Canada and the residents of Canada.”
In his later remarks that day, Carney said Canada is looking at where it can have overlap of economic interests with China, the same as what it is trying to do in the ongoing trade dispute with the United States.
“That’s part of what we’re doing with the United States,” Carney said. “[We’re] determining where can we trust the United States through ups and downs, and in what areas can we do that and where should we have that exposure. It’s a similar process with China. We are restarting broad engagement with China.”
Carney Talks About Meeting Chinese Premier
Speaking Oct. 16, Carney also referenced his meeting with Chinese Premier Li Qiang on Sept. 23 at the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in New York, saying it was a productive opportunity to look at the dependencies and exposures Canada has with China as its second-largest trading partner.
“When you have that situation, you end up with these dependencies and these exposures,” Carney said. “We have a broader trading relationship with China. There are different levers that we have, or opportunities that we have for China in Canada, and we are in the process of having those discussions on a much broader range of issues than single sectors and single trades.”
“Our foreign minister, Minister Anand, is arriving in Beijing basically as we speak,” Carney said. “[She] will be meeting with her counterparts, and I expect to meet the senior Chinese leadership in the coming month or so, and we‘ll continue those discussions, and we’ll see where the trade relationship evolves.”
The Conservatives are calling on Ottawa to take a different stance on China, noting that the federal government should pull the $1 billion loan it has earmarked for B.C. Ferries to build new vessels by a Chinese state-owned company.


