GreenGoo wrote: Tue Jan 15, 2019 2:40 pm
I don't know how to say this any other way. Dude, Canadian citizens are being murdered because Meng is a criminal. That they are using the legal system to do it doesn't change anything. You're starting to seriously offend me. I don't believe for a second that you're arguing in good faith, so I would appreciate it if you wouldn't continue to tell me how China arresting and killing Canadians is justified because "legal system". Attempting to provide cover for this is insulting to both our intelligence. Please stop.
China can go back to killing its own citizens.
This is not an innocent Canadian tourist that got caught in China bringing a bit of drug for personal use. This is someone that is involved in big smuggling operation. The guy also previously convicted drug related charges before in Canada.
I'm against death penalty but to claim that this is murder is not honest. The guy is a criminal that broke China's law. According to China law, death penalty is one of the sentence you can get for drug trafficking. It is not as if China suddenly sentence a Canadian for death penalty for a crime that are not normally sentenced with death penalty there.
China executed a lot of drug traffickers including some foreigners for years now.
https://www.abbynews.com/news/man-sente ... bbotsford/
A man sentenced to death in China on Monday for his role in a 2014 drug-smuggling operation has previously served two jail terms for drug crimes in Abbotsford.
Robert Lloyd Schellenberg, 36, formerly of Abbotsford, was sentenced to one year in prison in February 2010 and two years of probation on three counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking, according to the online provincial court database.
He was also charged with four more offences – two counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking and two counts of possession of a controlled substance – in August 2011.
That case went to trial in B.C. Supreme Court in Chilliwack, and Schellenberg was convicted of all four charges in 2012 and sentenced to two years in prison. Minus credit for time in pre-trial custody, Schellenberg spent another 16 months in jail.
All of these charges were based in Abbotsford.