Monday, June 15, 2026
ADVT 
National

Kovrig, Spavor 'robust' and 'inspiring': Barton

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Dec, 2020 01:03 AM
  • Kovrig, Spavor 'robust' and 'inspiring': Barton

Canada's ambassador to China says Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor are physically and mentally well and showing inspiring resilience as they near the end of their second year of imprisonment by the People’s Republic.

Dominic Barton says Chinese authorities were completely paranoid about COVID-19 as they denied consular access to the two men from January to November.

Barton is leading Canada's efforts in China to win the release of Kovrig and Spavor, who were arrested and imprisoned on Dec. 10, 2018, in what is widely seen as retaliation for Canada's arrest of Chinese high-tech executive Meng Wanzhou.

After months of delay, Barton was granted on-site virtual consular access to Kovrig and Spavor in November, following similar virtual visits with the two Canadians a month earlier.

Barton offered the update in testimony Thursday night before the House of Commons special committee on Canada-China relations.

He also described the three-day Chinese government-controlled visit to Tibet that he and nine other Western diplomats undertook in October, saying he remains concerned about the human rights situation there and that they only saw what the Chinese wanted them to see.

MORE National ARTICLES

Indigenous Experts Call For Return Of Countless Treasured Belongings Held In Museums

"All of the things that would have been interwoven prior to contact and just part of everyday life were torn apart and cast in a thousand directions," says Lou-ann Neel, a Kwakwaka'wakw artist and repatriation specialist at the Royal B.C. Museum in Victoria.

Indigenous Experts Call For Return Of Countless Treasured Belongings Held In Museums

Recognition Of Title Rights 'Still A Struggle' For First Nation After Court Win

As members of the Wet'suwet'en Nation mull a draft deal over rights and title, another Indigenous community knows what that kind of recognition could look like.

Recognition Of Title Rights 'Still A Struggle' For First Nation After Court Win

Eight New COVID-19 Cases In B.C., But Province Says Jump Expected

VICTORIA - British Columbia has announced eight new cases of COVID-19, including the first apparent community transmission of the virus in the province.

Eight New COVID-19 Cases In B.C., But Province Says Jump Expected

Ontario Reports New COVID-19 Case, Says Patient Used Transit While Symptomatic

A Canadian patient newly diagnosed with COVID-19 recently travelled to Las Vegas and used public transit in Toronto for several days before he was tested for the virus, according to the Toronto public health authority.    

Ontario Reports New COVID-19 Case, Says Patient Used Transit While Symptomatic

Advocacy Group Formed By Families Who Lost Loved Ones In Semi-Truck Crashes

A new non-profit group advocating road safety has been formed nearly two years after a deadly hockey bus crash in rural Saskatchewan.    

Advocacy Group Formed By Families Who Lost Loved Ones In Semi-Truck Crashes

Police Seeking Suspects After Abducted Toronto Teen Found Safe, Police Say

A 14-year-old boy abducted from a Toronto street as payback for his stepbrother's alleged criminal activity has been safely reunited with his family, the city's police chief said Friday as he appealed for the public's help in the case.

Police Seeking Suspects After Abducted Toronto Teen Found Safe, Police Say