China charges two Canadians with spying
Share - WeChat
Two Canadians were prosecuted for allegedly spying in China on Friday, officials said.
Michael Kovrig, a former diplomat, was charged by the No 2 branch of Beijing People's Procuratorate with the crime of prying into State secrets and intelligence gathering for overseas forces, a statement of the prosecuting authority said.
At the same time, in Dandong, a city in Northeast China's Liaoning province, businessman Michael Spavor was prosecuted on the charge of stealing and illegally providing State secrets to overseas forces, a statement of local prosecutors added.
Both the Canadians were detained in December 2018 by the Chinese government on "suspicions of engaging in activities that endanger national security".
- 'Separatist fallacy' of Lai Ching-te 'doomed to fail'
- Shanghai Symphony Orchestra rings in the new year
- New power station opens in Shanghai
- Series on Shanghai revolutionary sites airs
- Xu Beihong's horse-themed art exhibition opens in Shanghai
- China has enhanced social safety net: government minister
































