On his first official visit to China as Canada’s foreign minister, John Baird called China an “important ally ... a strategic partner” and talked of a “new era of trust,” saying that China’s abominable human rights record were best dealt with behind closed doors.
In short, it was a sorry display of pandering and ignorance.
Not everyone is interested in China. It’s a regime that will literally do anything to advance its own interests.
If that means blackmailing, lying, intimidating, subversion, espionage, cheating, so be it. China will do it.
Economic deals and investments in Canada are in China’s interests.
We all know China specializes in selling human organs for transplants.
It’s one thing to take the organs of criminals sentenced to death; it’s another to “harvest” organs from political dissidents.
There’s evidence body organs have been taken from Falun Gong practitioners who are not political and no threat to the regime — except that their popularity among the people offends the communist hierarchy.
When Baird was asked about the tens of millions killed by Chinese Communism, he noted Russia and Germany “have been through challenges in their history. We now count them as allies.”
It’s flawed justification. Germany and Russia are no longer ruled by Nazism and communism.
As for Tibet, China boasts it’s “peaceful and free” since Chinese soldiers took over, and imported Chinese to outnumber Tibetans.
Which brings us to John Baird himself.
One wonders why he was appointed foreign minister, a hometown boy who knows nothing of the world.
Look at his record.
Baird is 42 and from the age of 15, has been only interested in Conservative politics. He was first elected to the Ontario Legislature in 1995 at age 24, and proceeded through various cabinet posts until becoming a federal MP.
Baird has no background in the job market, never met a payroll, never been in the workforce, no real experience in life.
When Baird was asked about the deportation of Lai Changxing from Canada to China after 12 years of being in Canada, he wouldn’t comment.
Lai may be a scoundrel, but China has assured Canada this alleged leader of a smuggling, bribery and fraud operation will not face execution or torture.
Do you believe China can be trusted? Baird does.
What’s scandalous about the Lai case is his previous lawyer with experience in China, Clive Ansley, was assured by Canadian officials that Chinese witnesses who testified on the assurance that their identities would be kept confidential, were subsequently betrayed by Canada, their names given to the Chinese.
The whereabouts of witnesses are unknown.
In 2003, Ansley wrote an outraged letter to then-Liberal Immigration Minister Denis Coderre, noting the “treachery” and the “unconscionable betrayal” of Chinese who had trusted Canada’s promise of confidentiality. The Chretien government did nothing.
Also, Baird wasn’t prepared to make waves over the kidnapping in Uzbekestan, and imprisonment in China, of Canadian citizen Huseyin Celil.
Baird hopes Chinese goodwill may eventually release the guy.
What “goodwill?”
Shame on him, shame on Canada, shame on China.
In short, it was a sorry display of pandering and ignorance.
Not everyone is interested in China. It’s a regime that will literally do anything to advance its own interests.
If that means blackmailing, lying, intimidating, subversion, espionage, cheating, so be it. China will do it.
Economic deals and investments in Canada are in China’s interests.
We all know China specializes in selling human organs for transplants.
It’s one thing to take the organs of criminals sentenced to death; it’s another to “harvest” organs from political dissidents.
There’s evidence body organs have been taken from Falun Gong practitioners who are not political and no threat to the regime — except that their popularity among the people offends the communist hierarchy.
When Baird was asked about the tens of millions killed by Chinese Communism, he noted Russia and Germany “have been through challenges in their history. We now count them as allies.”
It’s flawed justification. Germany and Russia are no longer ruled by Nazism and communism.
As for Tibet, China boasts it’s “peaceful and free” since Chinese soldiers took over, and imported Chinese to outnumber Tibetans.
Which brings us to John Baird himself.
One wonders why he was appointed foreign minister, a hometown boy who knows nothing of the world.
Look at his record.
Baird is 42 and from the age of 15, has been only interested in Conservative politics. He was first elected to the Ontario Legislature in 1995 at age 24, and proceeded through various cabinet posts until becoming a federal MP.
Baird has no background in the job market, never met a payroll, never been in the workforce, no real experience in life.
When Baird was asked about the deportation of Lai Changxing from Canada to China after 12 years of being in Canada, he wouldn’t comment.
Lai may be a scoundrel, but China has assured Canada this alleged leader of a smuggling, bribery and fraud operation will not face execution or torture.
Do you believe China can be trusted? Baird does.
What’s scandalous about the Lai case is his previous lawyer with experience in China, Clive Ansley, was assured by Canadian officials that Chinese witnesses who testified on the assurance that their identities would be kept confidential, were subsequently betrayed by Canada, their names given to the Chinese.
The whereabouts of witnesses are unknown.
In 2003, Ansley wrote an outraged letter to then-Liberal Immigration Minister Denis Coderre, noting the “treachery” and the “unconscionable betrayal” of Chinese who had trusted Canada’s promise of confidentiality. The Chretien government did nothing.
Also, Baird wasn’t prepared to make waves over the kidnapping in Uzbekestan, and imprisonment in China, of Canadian citizen Huseyin Celil.
Baird hopes Chinese goodwill may eventually release the guy.
What “goodwill?”
Shame on him, shame on Canada, shame on China.
Origin
Source: Ottawa Sun
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