World
Canada faces questions over alleged Chinese interference
When Member of Parliament Kenny Chiu was contacted by the Canadian Safety Intelligence Service (CSIS) forward of Canada’s federal election in 2021, he was puzzled.
He had by no means anticipated to be a part of a CSIS investigation, not to mention one which required an in-person discuss on the peak of Canada’s COVID-19 pandemic.
“At the moment, every little thing had moved on-line, so it was fairly surprising that they insisted on a face-to-face sit-down,” Chiu informed Al Jazeera.
However the matter of the assembly was extremely delicate: alleged Chinese language interference in Canada’s elections. And shortly, it might be a dominant concern in Canada’s politics, shaping Chiu’s political fortunes – and ultimately even the prime minister’s.
Intelligence experiences leaked from the CSIS in latest months point out that Canada’s intelligence neighborhood has been involved about Chinese language election interference for many years.
The paperwork recommend the Chinese language authorities has not solely been spreading disinformation however has additionally been working a clandestine community to affect the previous two federal elections, in 2019 and 2021.
The alleged community contains Chinese language diplomats, Canadian politicians, enterprise homeowners and worldwide college students. They’re accused of utilizing their affect to help pro-Beijing candidates and scuttle voices essential of China.
A type of figures is the previous Chinese language Consul Normal of Vancouver Tong Xiaoling. In a leak to the newspaper The Globe and Mail, Tong allegedly boasted that Chinese language efforts resulted within the defeat of two candidates from Canada’s Conservative Get together within the province of British Columbia. Chiu was one in every of them.
Disinformation on the marketing campaign path
Chiu began to notice a shift six months forward of his reelection bid, within the early months of 2021.
First elected to symbolize the district of Steveston-Richmond East in 2019, Chiu had not too long ago launched a non-public member’s invoice known as the Overseas Affect Registry Act.
It might have required people working for international governments and political organisations to register their communications with Canadian officers in the event that they sought, for instance, to introduce coverage proposals or affect public contracts.
In keeping with Chiu, the invoice was supposed to supply Canada with instruments to fight international interference with out singling out any nation particularly.
“But, we noticed numerous disinformation being circulated in regards to the invoice, saying issues like, ‘It will put Chinese language-Canadians in jeopardy and that individuals with ties to China would danger being fined 400,000 Canadian {dollars}’ [about $300,000],” Chiu stated. “In fact, none of that was true.”
Chiu himself got here below fireplace. “There was additionally slander directed at me, saying that I’m a sell-out and accusing me of racism regardless of my very own Chinese language heritage.”
However Chiu was not alone in noticing a rise in scrutiny after the introduction of his invoice. The Canadian disinformation monitor DisInfoWatch carefully reviewed the tales about Chiu and different Conservative Get together candidates throughout the 2021 election.
It discovered there have been robust indications of a coordinated marketing campaign aimed toward influencing Chinese language-Canadian voters.
Benjamin Fung, a cybersecurity professor at McGill College, additionally analysed the disinformation disseminated throughout the election. He too concluded that there have been hyperlinks to Asia.
“It was widespread however numerous the exercise can be concentrated round a 9am to 5pm time slot – solely not in Canada time, however in China time,” Fung informed Al Jazeera. “So it was most definitely being coordinated from someplace in East Asia.”
Chiu’s district had a big Chinese language-Canadian neighborhood and consultants discovered {that a} sizeable proportion of the disinformation was being unfold via WeChat, a Chinese language social media app used extensively within the diaspora neighborhood.
With an estimated 1 million customers in Canada, WeChat was one of many few apps that allowed for communication between individuals inside and out of doors China.
Chiu subsequently misplaced his bid for reelection. And his personal member invoice on international interference was in the end shelved.
Scandal for the Liberal Get together
The exact impact of the alleged Chinese language interference is tough to measure, nevertheless.
Whereas Canada’s authorities has acknowledged that China did meddle within the 2019 and 2021 elections, a report launched in February concluded that these efforts didn’t meaningfully have an effect on the end result of both vote.
Chiu agrees that the Chinese language interference won’t have modified the results of his 2021 marketing campaign. However, he insists, that doesn’t imply that international meddling shouldn’t be taken critically.
“It’s not simply our democracy that’s below menace. It’s our very sovereignty as a nation that’s at stake,” he stated.
The latest revelations about election interference have ignited a political firestorm for the ruling Liberal Get together, led by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
One Liberal Get together MP, Han Dong, was recognized among the many leaks as having personal conferences with the Chinese language consul basic in Toronto, Han Tao.
Nationwide safety sources quoted by CTV Information accuse Dong of encouraging China to delay releasing two Canadians, Michael Sparov and Michael Kovrig, who have been detained in 2018 on espionage expenses.
Releasing them too early, Dong allegedly implied, would profit the Conservative Get together within the polls.
Dong has denied he made any such options however confirmed that he did communicate with the consul basic. His workplace didn’t reply to Al Jazeera’s requests for remark and Dong has since stepped down from the Liberal Get together, serving as an alternative as an unbiased.
Amid rising political stress, Trudeau appointed an unbiased particular rapporteur in March to look at the experiences of election interference and decide whether or not a public inquiry was obligatory.
His critics say it’s too little, too late. They accuse Trudeau of being extra fixated on stopping the leaks than addressing the interference itself.
Preying on anti-Chinese language hate
Initially, Trudeau dismissed the allegations towards Dong as proof of anti-Asian racism.
“One of many issues we’ve seen sadly over the previous years is an increase in anti-Asian racism linked to the pandemic and issues being arisen round individuals’s loyalties,” Trudeau stated at a information convention in Mississauga.
Accusations that Dong was “one way or the other not loyal to Canada”, he added, “shouldn’t be entertained”.
However some consultants say the problem of anti-Asian hate has been used as a smokescreen, in some instances, to disguise election interference efforts.
Stories have proven that instances of anti-Asian racism and xenophobia rose in Canada throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and afterwards, leading to an elevated sense of insecurity amongst Canadians of Asian heritage.
Beijing has been capable of play on such issues, dismissing criticism of its interference efforts as additional proof of anti-Asian bias, in response to analysis analyst Ai-Males Lau. She works for the Doublethink Lab, an organisation that tracks affect operations.
The answer, she informed Al Jazeera, is to interact instantly with Chinese language diaspora communities to construct belief in Canada’s public establishments. However the authorities initiatives she has seen to date have been top-down.
“I nonetheless haven’t actually seen something that’s forward-looking by way of what we’re going to do for the subsequent election,” she stated.
“Sadly, we’ve got a very nasty behavior in Canada of being extremely reactive to any allegations of international interference quite than being proactive.”
China, in the meantime, has constantly denied allegations that it interfered in Canada’s elections. On a message board on the Chinese language embassy’s official web site, a spokesperson known as the accusations “pure slander and whole nonsense”.
Al Jazeera reached out to the Chinese language consulate in Vancouver and Toronto in addition to the Chinese language embassy in Ottawa, however none replied to requests for remark.
Past election interference
Some advocates consider the interference extends effectively past Canada’s electoral system. In 2019, Canadian activist Rukiye Turdush stated she uncovered proof that college students deliberate to impede a chat she gave at Ontario’s McMaster College, in collaboration with Chinese language officers.
Turdush, a member of the Uighur ethnic group, had given a chat in regards to the scenario in Xinjiang, the far western area of China the place some 1 million Uighurs have been held in reeducation camps, in response to the United Nations.
One Chinese language pupil in attendance accused her of mendacity and swore at her earlier than storming out. However afterwards, Turdush acquired a collection of screenshots from WeChat purporting to indicate Chinese language college students gathering details about her and her son, ostensibly to intimidate her.
Based mostly on the chats, shared with Al Jazeera, Chinese language pupil teams reported to and coordinated with the Chinese language embassy in Canada to disrupt her occasion.
“It exhibits how deep the Chinese language interference goes in Canadian society in the present day and what number of completely different Chinese language actors are concerned,” Turdush informed Al Jazeera.
In 2022, the Spanish NGO Safeguard Defenders launched a report revealing a worldwide community of greater than 100 so-called abroad police service stations, working on behalf of the Chinese language authorities.
It recognized three websites in Toronto alone, with different places believed to be in Montreal and Vancouver.
The presence of such police stations doesn’t shock Toronto resident Mimi Lee, a member of the NGO Torontonian HongKongers Motion Group.
The Chinese language authorities’s affect is pervasive, she stated. “The interference from the Chinese language authorities exists from high to backside in Canada in the present day.”
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Man in India regains consciousness before his cremation on funeral pyre: reports
A 25-year-old man who was declared dead and about to be cremated in India this week was found to be still alive by witnesses, according to reports.
Rohitash Kumar, 25, who was deaf and mute, was declared dead at a hospital in the state of Rajasthan in the northwestern part of India without a post-mortem examination, according to The Times of India.
Once it was clear Kumar was alive at his cremation on Thursday afternoon, his family reportedly took him back to a hospital where he died early Friday morning.
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Three doctors involved in declaring Kumar dead at the Bhagwan Das Khetan district hospital have since been suspended, the newspaper reported.
Kumar had suffered an epileptic seizure and was declared dead after he flatlined while doctors were performing CPR on him, the Daily Mail reported, citing the AFP news service.
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“The situation was nothing short of a miracle,” a witness at the funeral pyre told local news outlet ETV Bharat. “We all were in shock. He was declared dead, but there he was, breathing and alive.”
Ramavtar Meena, a government official in Rajasthan’s Jhunjhunu district, called the incident “serious negligence.”
“Action will be taken against those responsible. The working style of the doctors will also be thoroughly investigated,” he said.
Meena added that a committee had been formed to investigate the incident.
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Thousands march across Europe protesting violence against women
Violence against women and girls remains largely unreported due to the impunity, silence, stigma and shame surrounding it.
Thousands marched across France and Italy protesting violence against women on Saturday – two days before the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women.
Those demonstrating protested all forms of violence against women – whether it be sexual, physical, psychological and economic.
The United Nations designated 25 November as the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. The goal is to raise awareness of the violence women are subjected to and the reality that the scale and nature of the issue is often hidden.
Activists demonstrated partially naked in Rome, hooded in balaclavas to replicate the gesture of Iranian student Ahoo Daryaei, who stripped in front of a university in Tehran to protest the country’s regime.
In France, demonstrations were planned in dozens of cities like Paris, Marseille and Lille.
More than 400 organisations reportedly called for demonstrations across the country amidst widespread shock caused by the Pelicot mass rape trial.
Violence against women and girls remains one of the most prevalent and pervasive human rights violations in the world, according to the United Nations. Globally, almost one in three women have been subjected to physical and/or sexual violence at least once in their life.
For at least 51,100 women in 2023, the cycle of gender-based violence ended with their murder by partners or family members. That means a woman was killed every ten minutes.
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