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Friday, May 16, 2025

BONOKOSKI: Why did feds take so long to expel Chinese diplomat?

It was a waste of time to debate whether the Communist regime of China would retaliate following Canada’s expulsion of the Chinese diplomat suspected of intimidating Tory MP Michael Chong.

A tit-for-tat was a done deal the moment China’s Zhao Wei was declared “persona non grata” and given the boot from Canada.

China would see this as an act of provocation, and China does not take provocation very well.

Hence, China on Tuesday ordered the removal of Jennifer Lynn Lalonde, Canada’s diplomat in its Shanghai Consulate.

“China reserves the right to further react,” Beijing said in a statement.

The censures mark a significant deterioration in relations between Ottawa and Beijing following reports of alleged Chinese political interference in Canada.

Canada had accused China of targeting Chong and his relatives in Hong Kong after Chong accused China of human rights abuses.

Diplomatic relations between the two countries have been strained since the detention of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou, held in Canada on U.S. fraud charges in 2018, and China’s tit-for-tat arrest of the two Michaels, Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, on trumped-up spying charges.

All three were freed in 2021.

On Monday, Canada’s Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Jolly finally declared Zhao a “persona non grata,” a Latin phrase for an “unwelcome person,” a move China called “unscrupulous” and the reason Lalonde was declared the same as a “reciprocal countermeasure.”

“I have been clear: we will not tolerate any form of foreign interference in our internal affairs. Diplomats in Canada have been warned that if they engage in this type of behaviour, they will be sent home,” wrote Joly.

“This decision has been taken after careful consideration of all factors at play. We remain firm in our resolve that defending our democracy is of the utmost importance.”

The move by Ottawa follows a Canadian intelligence report exposed by the Globe and Mail that accused Zhao of being involved in gathering information about the 51-year-old Chong following his vocal criticism China’s treatment of its Uyghur minority population.

It said Canada’s spy agency, CSIS, believes China sought details about Chong’s relatives in Hong Kong in an effort to deter any further “anti-China positions.”

Two months ago, as Mehmet Tohti told a parliamentary committee reported on by the CBC, he was in the middle of campaigning to resettle Uyghur refugees in Canada when he received a disturbing phone call.

“I was told that my two sisters are dead and so was my mother, the whereabouts of my three brothers and their spouses and the children unknown,” he told the committee Friday.

“Beijing is watching every day with the threat of intimidation and harassment.”

It was just one example of what another witness described as a relentless campaign against those who speak out against the Chinese Communist Party.

“China controls everything,” said Cheuk Kwan, co-chair of the Toronto Association for Democracy in China.

“Even if you change your cellphone, they can quickly find you.”

Kwan said he and others have been trying to sound the alarm for years.

“They also harass and intimidate Canadians who are critical of China, activists, dissidents and human rights defenders, rendering the Chinese Canadian community the real victims of this game,” he said.

The threats are sometimes subtle but always clear, Kwan said.

“You get a phone call in the middle of day asking, ‘So, how are your parents doing back in Sichuan, China?'” he said.

Kwan, a filmmaker, told the same committee he was targeted back in 2005 on a trip to Hong Kong for a  festival.

“I was followed,” he said. “And I was questioned during the Q&A period by (someone who) seemed to be an agent of the Chinese communist regime. These are little things — you know that I know that you know that I am watching you.”

Their stories come amid renewed interest into alleged Chinese interference in Canada’s elections — and questions about whether the Liberal party was briefed on it as long as two years ago.

If two years, why so long for an expulsion?

UCP calls on Alberta NDP candidate to apologize for sharing joke about wildfires

UCP candidate Brian Jean is calling on Alberta NDP candidate Rob Miyashiro to apologize for sharing a joke about the wildfires raging in the province’s north. 

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced a state of emergency on Saturday as over 100 wildfires burned. 

But on Friday, one Twitter user made light of the situation, writing, “Sad this is happening but isn’t it kind of a Metaphor for The UCP burning this province down the past four years.”

Miyashiro, the Alberta NDP candidate for Lethbridge East, retweeted the post. 

He chose not to apologize when asked about it at an Alberta NDP campaign stop in Lethbridge with leader Rachel Notley on Monday night. 

“There’s (not) really any comment to make,” he said. “If you look at the tweet, I mean, just look at the tweet.” 

“After sharing a tweet that makes a mockery of the wildfires and evacuations, Rachel Notley and #yql-east NDP candidate Rob Miyashiro chose to double down today,” the UCP War Room wrote in response. 

Jean said Miyashiro should just apologize. 

“Lethbridge voters should take note,” he said. 

Since Friday, Smith has largely put campaigning on hold to deal with the crisis. She attended one UCP fundraiser on Saturday afternoon in between press conferences about the wildfires. 

During an extensive wildfire update on Monday afternoon, Smith announced that eligible evacuees will receive $1,250 per adult and an additional $500 per dependent child under 18 years.  She also put out an urgent call for 1,000 volunteer firefighters, saying some experienced Indigenous firefighters would like to join the fight.

Around 29,000 Albertans have been displaced by the fires. 

The Town of Drayton Valley announced on Facebook that four homes have been lost in the wildfires. 

Smith made her first campaign announcement in three days on Tuesday afternoon, in which she announced the UCP’s plan to tackle rising criminal activity in the province. 

Notley has continued campaigning, saying it’s appropriate for her to do so because Alberta is in an election period.

The Alberta NDP leader said both she and Smith are continuing to work on the campaign amid the crisis. 

“Indeed, we’ve seen both of us do that,” she said in response to a question from True North. “And so, that’s what we’re doing.”

She did not answer a question from True North about whether it was wrong for the premier to receive criticism for attending a UCP fundraiser over the weekend considering that Notley has continued her campaign.

School erases “exclusionary” Mother’s Day sign because woke parent was offended

Credit: CP24

A Toronto-area school has decided to take down a sign featuring an appreciative message for moms ahead of Mother’s Day after one parent complained in a Facebook group that it was “exclusionary” and local media picked up the story. 

A CP24 article on the incident explains how a local resident took issue with the sign in front of Kew Beach Junior Public School in Toronto and posted her rant in a Facebook group. 

The original message, which was crafted by Grade 6 students simply read, “Life does not come with a manual. It comes with a mom.” 

“Grade 6 students at Kew Beach came up with the first quote collectively as they prepare for Mother’s Day this weekend, to share how much they care for and depend on their moms,” said Toronto District School Board spokesperson Shari Schwartz-Maltz. 

The specific Facebook user in question took issue with how the sign didn’t take into account kids from different kinds of families like LGBTQ families. 

After receiving a few emails and calls from people who were also offended by the sign, Kew Beach acquiesced and replaced the message on the signage – ridding it entirely of any reference to mothers. 

“Upon feedback, the school recognized that this quote does not reflect the inclusivity of our community, and took immediate steps to address the issue. The sign has now been updated with a new message of an encouraging acronym for May,” explained Schwartz-Maltz. 

The sign was replaced with another message that featured a spelling mistake. 

“M: Make this month count. A: Accoplish (sic) your goals. Y: You can do this,” the new signage reads. 

‘We’re putting criminals on notice:’ UCP makes its pitch for public safety

A re-elected United Conservative Party government would implement a comprehensive public safety plan to tackle rising criminal activity.

UCP leader Danielle Smith said perpetrators of violent crimes are often out on bail. 

While the UCP stands with its provincial partners in demanding the federal government end the system of catch-and-release plaguing communities, Smith said she won’t wait on Ottawa. 

“We will take action to ensure Albertans feel safe again and we will do whatever it takes to ensure they do so,” she said from Edmonton on Tuesday. 

Under the Safe Streets Action Plan, a re-elected Smith government would implement bracelet monitoring of dangerous offenders out on bail and deploy sheriffs to monitor them. They would add 100 more patrol officers on city streets, continue to deploy sheriffs alongside Calgary and Edmonton police officers to address public disorder, create new anti-fentanyl and illegal-gun trafficking teams, and increase funding for internet child exploitation and gang suppression units. 

The government would also make it easier for parents to know the whereabouts of violent and sexual offenders, and make investments in womens’ shelters and sexual assault counselling.

In the last two years, 26 homicides in Edmonton were committed by criminals out on bail.

Both Edmonton and Calgary have been hit by a crime wave. Overall criminal occurrences at LRT stations in Calgary increased 46% between 2021 and 2022.

The numbers are even worse in Edmonton, where LRT and transit centres experienced a 75% increase in violent criminal incidents between July 2022 and January 2023.

Calgary West UCP candidate Mike Ellis said “we’re putting criminals on notice.” The UCP is the only party with a credible plan that places families at the centre of safety, he said.

“Albertans are no longer going to tolerate being harassed or frightened or victimized,” he said. 

“You have a right to live in your community, free of violence and social disorder. You have a right to take transit to school, or work.” 

Ellis, a former police officer, said soft-on-crime activists tell Albertans to make a choice between compassion and addressing public safety.

“As I have told those I’ve engaged with as a public safety minister from Edmonton’s Chinatown to families down in Lethbridge, you do not have to choose one over the other,” he said. 

Holly Mah, a representative of the Chinatown and Area Business Improvement Association, said Chinatown is suffering under unprecedented safety issues. 

“You are witnessing the demise of a Chinatown that wants to survive,” she said. 

“I’m here because I love my community and we want to see the suffering on our streets come to an end. We need help. We need action.”

In an announcement last month, Alberta NDP leader Rachel Notley promised to hire 150 more police officers and pair them with the hiring of 150 social workers, mental health workers, addictions counsellors and more. The announcement came even as several NDP candidates have a lengthy history of espousing defund the police rhetoric.

Ontario Science Centre a point of major contention for Toronto mayoral candidates

As Premier Doug Ford announced his government’s plan to revitalize Ontario Place and move the Ontario Science Centre to the Ontario Place’s grounds, Toronto’s mayoral candidates have been vocally taking positions of support or objecting to the province’s plan. 

In late April, Premier Ford announced that his government would be pursuing plans in collaboration with the city of Toronto to revitalize the dilapidated Ontario Place that has been closed since 2012. This plan would, in part, see the Ontario Science Centre move from its current location at Don Mills and Eglinton to Ontario Place.

Toronto’s mayoral candidates have been weighing in on the proposal, with varying levels of support or opposition. 

Olivia Chow, Mitzie Hunter, Anthony Perruzza and Josh Matlow, as well as Brad Bradford have come out against the proposal, criticizing the provincial government for moving a valuable institution out of the Flemington Park community. 

On the other hand, candidates Ana Bailão and Anthony Furey came out with conditional support for the Ford government’s plan.

Bailão says that she would support the Ford government’s plan to move the Science Centre if the building was preserved and housing was built on the Science Centre’s parking lot.

“Ana Bailão is calling on them to guarantee the Science Centre building will be preserved and used to serve the local community,” says Bailão’s campaign.

“As Mayor, Ana would approve building 5,000 new homes – including 1,500 affordable homes – on the city-owned land where the Science Centre’s parking lot is, and on the land outside of the ravine.”

Furey, who is currently on leave as True North vice-president of editorial and content, says he would call for public consultations so that local communities can have a say on the plan.

“I respect that people are extremely passionate about plans for both the Science Centre and Ontario Place, this is why I’ve called for public consultations on the final plans. The people need to have their say before I can approve this project as Mayor,” Furey told True North.

Hunter said that the province rushed their plan and Torontonians shouldn’t have to go downtown if they wish to visit an attraction.

“This is yet another rushed decision that does not take into account the best interest of the whole city, particularly the community around the Science Centre and the people who live there,” said Hunter.

“And also for many others in Toronto who should not always have to go downtown if they want to visit an attraction.”

Ward 12 councillor Josh Matlow sent an open letter to the Ford government asking them to reconsider their plan to move the Science Centre.

“I am requesting that your government reconsider moving the Ontario Science Centre to Ontario Place and meet with parent groups and community leaders in Thorncliffe, Flemingdon Park and the wider Don Mills area,” reads Matlow’s letter. 

“The Science Centre serves as an important economic driver of this community by bringing visitors from across the city and around the world to Don Mills and Eglinton.”

Brad Bradford says that downtown politicians are “obsessed” with moving the Science Centre downtown and stripping the Thorncliffe community of a cultural asset. 

“For 50 years, the Ontario Science Centre has been an important cultural and educational asset to this community providing jobs and entertainment for families,” said Bradford in a Twitter video.

Olivia Chow made a similar statement, urging the Ford government to reverse course.

“Ripping the Ontario Science Centre out of the Flemingdon Park and Thorncliffe neighbourhoods is the wrong choice,” said Chow.

The Ford government says that they are moving the Ontario Science Centre out of a building they say is old and run down and will open up space to build housing, a community centre, or a school.

“They’re in this old, run-down building (where) the attendance is down 40 per cent,” said Ford at a press conference. 

Former Toronto police chief Mark Saunders has remained relatively quiet on the issue and did not respond to True North’s request for comment on the matter.

The Andrew Lawton Show | Liberal members want Trudeau to restrict free speech online

Among the nearly two dozen policy resolutions passed by Liberal members at their party’s convention on the weekend was one calling on the government to restrict “disinformation” and ban online content whose source can’t be “traced.” True North’s Andrew Lawton says free speech is on its way out, especially with Ofcom, the CRTC of Britain, coming down today on broadcaster Mark Steyn and author Naomi Wolf.

Also, True North’s Rachel Emmanuel joins the show to give an update on the Alberta election and the NDP’s decision to continue campaigning while the province declares a State of Emergency due to the ongoing wildfires.

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Conservative MP blames Trudeau for failures of armed forces

Conservative MP Cheryl Gallant blasted Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the House of Commons on Monday evening for calling Canada’s heritage racist and underfunding the country’s military.

“The Canadian Armed Forces is currently under an unprecedented reconstitution order. Recruitment is cratering under the Prime Minister because Canadians know the truth. Why should they put their lives on the line in defence of Canada when the Prime Minister will not even defend the idea of Canada? How can we have a ‘national’ defence if the Prime Minister believes we live in a post-nation state?” said Gallant. 

“The Liberals believe Canada is a racist colonial oppressor state. When radical extremists pull down statues, the Prime Minister sides with the vandals. He strips historic names from buildings while a taxpayer-funded foundation named for his father takes donations from dictatorships. He would rather apologize for the country than celebrate it.”

Liberal MP and Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Defence Bryan May responded to Gallant’s criticisms by pointing to federal investments into Canadian Armed Forces bases at Petawawa and elsewhere. 

“Investments like these are not just happening at Petawawa. They are happening across the country. In March, the Prime Minister announced a $7.3-billion investment to upgrade and build new infrastructure that will house Canada’s fleet of F-35 fighter jets, as part of our NORAD modernization plan,” said May. 

Gallant went on to blast the Liberal government for stripping Canada’s official state Crown of symbols related to Christianity and Canada’s heritage.

Coinciding with the time of King Charles III coronation this weekend, the Canadian government unveiled a new design to the “Canadian Royal Crown” on Canada’s Coat of Arms. The new design no longer features the traditional cross and fleur-de-lis. 

“This country strips out symbols of our heritage from the Crown and replaces them with a snowflake. What message do we think that sends to potential recruits?” said Gallant. 

“Defending freedom and democracy used to be the best rallying cry to join the Canadian Armed Forces, yet the illiberals seem hell-bent on persuading Canadians that believing in freedom and democracy is an unacceptable view. Nothing symbolizes the “illiberal party” contempt for the military than its leaving our women and men in uniform out in the cold and dressing them up in snowflakes.”

Additionally, Gallant took a swipe at the Trudeau government for embracing American-style politics by inviting former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to speak at the most recent Liberal convention. 

Dutch MEP compares Trudeau freezing bank accounts to “social credit system”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s controversial decision to invoke the Emergencies Act and freeze the bank accounts of Freedom Convoy protesters continues to be an object of criticism in the European Parliament. 

On Apr. 19, Dutch MEP Marcel de Graaff compared the Liberal government’s actions to a “social credit system” akin to China’s while debating the introduction of a “Digital Euro” in Brussels. 

“Citizens’ greatest concern is that in the future the government will be able to limit what citizens spend their money on, such as meat products and fuels. Or that we get a form of a social credit system like in Canada, where your account is blocked if you are critical of the government,” said de Graaff. 

“That is why the digital euro must meet the following requirements: purchases must not be traceable to the product, the balance must also be immediately withdrawable as cash and the balance must not be programmable. This must be laid down in law.” 

At the height of the prime minister’s crackdown on the Freedom Convoy last February, the Liberal government received a wave of international condemnation.

Croatian MEP Mislav Koalkusic accused Trudeau of engaging in a “dictatorship of the worst kind” while the prime minister paid a visit to the European Parliament. 

“Canada, once a symbol of the modern world, has become a symbol of civil rights violations under your quasi-liberal boot in recent months,” Koalkusic told Trudeau at the time.

He was also joined by Romanian MEP Cristian Terhes, Finnish MEP Laura Huhtasaari and others. 

In the UK, Tory MP Marcus Fysh called on his country’s Foreign Secretary to discourage the Canadian government from pursuing “authoritarian measures” against Canadian citizens. 

In recent months, the Liberal government’s involvement in the Chinese foreign interference scandal has also brought about further negative international attention. 

The Australian Senate raised the issue of how the Canadian Liberals were the “most preferred” election contender for Beijing in past elections. 

The Daily Brief | Is it appropriate to campaign during a state of emergency?

Alberta NDP leader Rachel Notley says it’s appropriate for her to continue campaigning as wildfires rage on in the province’s north because Alberta is in an election period. Meanwhile, United Conservative Party leader Danielle Smith has not made any campaign announcements for the past three days.

Plus, a Winnipeg high school is ending observation of Mother’s Day and Father’s Day to “transition to a more inclusive practice.”

And Canada expels a Chinese diplomat implicated in a scheme to intimidate a Conservative MP and his family – and hours later, China responds in kind.

Tune into The Daily Brief with Rachel Emmanuel and Lindsay Shepherd!

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Olivia Chow accused of meeting with group allegedly linked to Chinese police stations

A Chinese-Canadian political activist is accusing Toronto mayoral candidate Olivia Chow of meeting with a business group allegedly connected to a Chinese police station operating in Canada.

According to Karen Woods, co-founder of the Canadian Chinese Political Affairs Committee (CCPAC), Chow met with representatives of the Fu Qing Business Association as part of her mayoral campaign.

Last October, Global News reported that the Canada Toronto Fu Qing Business Association was operating an illegal “police station” in the Greater Toronto Area connected with the People’s Republic of China (PRC). 

As part of China’s operation Fox Hunt, the PRC have been targeting Chinese nationals across the globe who the regime have identified as political rivals, dissidents or critics and forcibly repatriating them back to China, according to the human rights group SafeGuard Defenders.

The Fu Qing Business Association is said to have been operating one of these Chinese police stations in a Markham industrial plaza. 

The Fu Qing Business Association is also connected with the Confederation of Toronto Chinese Canadian Organizations (CTCCO), an umbrella group of dozens of associations promoting ties with Beijing and consular officials. Wei Chengyi, a member of CTCCO who has been investigated by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), is the permanent honorary chairman of the Fu Qing Business Association. 

A photo tweeted by Woods, dated May 4, shows a woman identified as Chow at a boardroom table with several other people.

Chow did not respond to True North’s request for comment or context on the photo and the meeting. 

According to Woods, Chow has a history of collaborating with PRC-backed individuals. 

During Chow’s original campaign for the Toronto mayoralty in 2014, prominent member of China’s overseas designated community leaders program Simon Zhong endorsed and campaigned for Chow. 

Zhong is the executive director of the Toronto Community and Culture Centre, also known as the Toronto Mainland Chinese Community Centre and is also member of the Overseas Chinese Affairs Committee of China’s National People’s Congress – the PRC’s legislature.

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