Ottawa condemns Chinese executions of four Canadians on drug charges
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Canada-China ties have been icy since 2018 when a CFO of Chinese telecoms firm Huawei was detained in Vancouver at the Trump administration’s request.
PHOTO: REUTERS
OTTAWA – Canada said on March 19 that China had executed four of Canadian citizens on drug smuggling charges earlier in 2025, and strongly condemned Beijing’s use of the death penalty.
Canadian Foreign Minister Melanie Joly told reporters that all four had been dual citizens and said Ottawa would ask for leniency for other Canadians facing the same fate.
“There are four Canadians that have been executed and therefore we are strongly condemning what happened,” she said, adding that all four had been convicted on drug charges.
Separately, the Canadian Foreign Ministry said that Robert Schellenberg, a Canadian man sentenced to death in 2019 for drug smuggling, had not been executed.
Canada-China ties have been icy since 2018 when Ms Meng Wanzhou, chief financial officer of Chinese telecoms firm Huawei, was detained in Vancouver at the Trump administration’s request. China arrested two Canadians shortly afterwards.
Ms Meng and the Canadian duo were released in 2021.
Earlier in March, Beijing announced tariffs on over US$2.6 billion (S$3.45 billion) worth of Canadian agricultural and food products, retaliating against levies Ottawa slapped on Chinese electric vehicles and steel and aluminium products in 2024.
In a statement, the Chinese embassy in Ottawa said Canada was making irresponsible remarks.
“China always imposed severe penalties on drug-related crimes and maintains a ‘zero tolerance’ attitude towards the drug problem,” it said, without confirming that any executions had taken place. REUTERS


