Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Meng: Dollar clearing doesn't give U.S. authority

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Mar, 2021 08:06 PM
  • Meng: Dollar clearing doesn't give U.S. authority

A lawyer for Meng Wanzhou says payments between a Huawei subsidiary and an HSBC client that were cleared in American dollars do not give the United States jurisdiction to charge the executive.

American authorities are seeking the extradition of the Huawei chief financial officer on fraud charges linked to a 2013 meeting in which they allege she lied to the bank about a subsidiary of her company.

The subsidiary, Skycom, was doing business in Iran, which authorities allege put HSBC at risk of violating American sanctions, and they also point to payments that were cleared through the United States.

However, defence lawyer Gib van Ert has told a British Columbia Supreme Court judge that the practice of "dollar clearing" is not sufficient under international law to allow the U.S. to charge Meng.

He says Meng is a Chinese national, HSBC is an English-Chinese bank, their meeting happened in Hong Kong, and the payments that were cleared through the American system were still foreign.

The lawyer read from expert reports that concluded the sheer volume of dollar clearing through the United States everyday means the country cannot assert jurisdiction over Meng on that basis.

MORE National ARTICLES

Senate committees finally get underway

Senate committees finally get underway
The dispute revolved around Conservative concerns that the Senate was moving toward holding fully virtual committee meetings.

Senate committees finally get underway

Canada in 'serious' situation with COVID-19: PM

Canada in 'serious' situation with COVID-19: PM
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stressed the country remains in an "incredibly serious" situation where Canadians will need to refocus their efforts until vaccines become widely available.

Canada in 'serious' situation with COVID-19: PM

Information watchdog slams RCMP on access failures

Information watchdog slams RCMP on access failures
The assessment comes in a new report in which Caroline Maynard takes the Mounties to task for failing to address long-standing issues in the handling of access-to-information requests.

Information watchdog slams RCMP on access failures

Wind, snow, as storm hits several parts of B.C

Wind, snow, as storm hits several parts of B.C
The system arrives at the same time as unusually high tides, raising the potential for flooding and prompting cities such as Courtenay and Delta to issue storm surge advisories or install portable flood barriers along low-lying areas.

Wind, snow, as storm hits several parts of B.C

Vancouver groups complain about new police unit

Vancouver groups complain about new police unit
Three groups allege the department's Neighbourhood Response Unit will "intensify disproportionate and discriminatory policing" in some downtown neighbourhoods.  

Vancouver groups complain about new police unit

B.C. reports nine COVID-19 deaths over 3 days

B.C. reports nine COVID-19 deaths over 3 days
Dr. Bonnie Henry says they know that certain sections of the population are disproportionately targeted when fines are handed out, including those with disabilities, the homeless and racialized communities.

B.C. reports nine COVID-19 deaths over 3 days