Canada and human rights in China: Are we making a difference?

Here’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper speaking in Shanghai at a dinner organized by the Canada-China Business Council. It is Dec. 4, 2009. After spending most of his speech talking about the importance of boosting the trading relationship between the two countries, there is this bit:

But ladies and gentlemen, just as trade is a two-way street, so too is dialogue.  Our government believes, and has always believed, that a mutually beneficial economic relationship is not incompatible with a good and frank dialogue on fundamental values like freedom, human rights and the rule of law. Continue reading Canada and human rights in China: Are we making a difference?

In China, here's the roster for corporate Canada's dream team

Prime Minister Stephen Harper arrived in Beijing leading a corporate Canada dream team. The Chinese have definitely noticed. Press reports here have consistently noted that Harper is leading “a strong delegation.”

On Wednesday here, Harper led a “business roundtable” with the following Canadian executives: Continue reading In China, here's the roster for corporate Canada's dream team

Free trade and a praying PM: Canada is front page news in China

I’ve travelled to a lot of spots around the world covering Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s international travels and I cannot recall him ever generating the kind of positive press he’s getting in this morning’s China Daily, the English-language state-run daily newspaper here. Continue reading Free trade and a praying PM: Canada is front page news in China

China Daily's lead editorial on Harper visit

Good Wednesday morning from Beijing where the lead editorial in the
China Daily — the government-owned main English language newspaper
here — features a lead editorial about Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s
visit.

The editorial notes: “The fact that he is accompanied by five
ministers, six members of parliament and 40 business executives indicates
his government is looking to garner lucrative business deals with China.”

There is no mention in the editorial that the Harper plans to raise
any human rights or democratic reform issues while he is here. But, reading
between the lines, the China Daily editorialists seem to brush off any
official Canadian concerns on this front.

Differences aside, there is no conflict of fundamental interests between
China and Canada. The growth in Sino-Canadian ties has brought concrete
benefits to both nations and at the same time promotoed peace, stability and
prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region and the whole world.

For the smooth and healthy development of bilateral ties, both sides
should treat each other with respect, accommodate each other’s core
interests and major concerns, and appropriately handle sensitive issues. It
is hoped the two countries can make their relationship a model for relations
between two countries of different social systems and modes of
development.

Akin and gang are all terrorists, says former Star editor!

Good “tabloid” headline for this blog post — don’t you think? — and it’ good cuz it’s true! Let me explain:

Later this month, I and several of my Sun News Network colleagues will participate in an event called Freedom Weekend that Ezra Levant, host of The Source on Sun News Network, has organized. Here’s the nub of the idea: Most of the on-air talent you see on Sun News Network will hang out at a nice spot in Ontario’s Muskoka cottage country for a weekend and we’ll talk politics or whatever with those who want to join us.

Other news organizations have done stuff like this.  The Globe and Mail, for example, did a 10-day luxury trip in 2008 with 500 paying guests. It sold out!

Hosted by Globe and Mail Publisher Phillip Crawley and Editor-in-Chief Edward Greenspon, the  cruise features a custom itinerary designed specifically for the interests of Globe and Mail readers including: gourmet classes and demonstrations with Food Network celebrity chefs and  The Globe and Mail‘s own Lucy Waverman; wine tastings hosted by Globe wine expert Beppi  Crosariol; special shopping excursions led by Globe Life’s Amy Verner; and “behind the news”  events with Globe and Mail columnists and editors including Margaret Wente, [Andrew] Willis, [current editorial board chair John Geiger, [current Ottawa bureau chief] John Ibbitson, and [after years reporting from Ottawa and just moving to Halifax] Jane Taber.

“The cruise is the ultimate brand extension,” commented Globe and Mail Publisher Phillip  Crawley.

No wonder it sold out. Great food with Lucy, wine with Beppi, shopping with Amy all capped off with politics with John and Jane! (I kid here but in fact that sounded to me like a lot of fun for I quite enjoyed yakking with Beppi about booze when I worked at 444 Front and John and Jane do, in fact, know a lot about politics. Mind you: I couldn’t afford the freight … sigh)

So Ezra organized something similar for our network — great “brand extension.” I’ll be there. I’ll do what I do 7 days a a week no matter who’s listening – talk about politics, not from the perspective of any partisan viewpoint but from the perspective of “an independent.”

But — get this — John Miller, who is a “professor of journalism at Ryerson for 23 years… That followed a 20-year career as an editor and reporter..  at the Toronto Star, where he was foreign editor, founding editor of the Sunday Star, weekend editor, deputy managing editor, and acting managing editor.
He came to Ryerson as chair of the School of Journalism, and served in that position for 10 year..”
says in a post at his blog that that I and my colleagues participating in Ezra’s “Freedom Weekend” are terrorists.  Now I’ve been called names before  but this one takes the friggin’ cake!

“… the last time a group of ideological warriors went north to train in the backwoods and plot to storm Parliament, blow up the CBC, seize the airwaves and spread terror across the land. Oh yeah, the Toronto 18 did that. Didn’t police arrest the lot of them and call them the gravest threat to our democracy?

I think a weekend with Ezra and friends could be something just like that.

The only thing that sets them apart from the Muslim extremists is that Sun Media will be charging you admission.

[read the whole post: Blog: Fun with Ezra]

And remember: The Star itself [in this excellent long-form series by Isabel Teotonio and elsewhere] agreess that it is accurate and appropriate to identify the Toronto 18 that Miller compares us to as “terrorists.”

C’mon professor Miller! Ain’t you jumping the shark a bit with that one?

Oil sands monitoring: Some positives but some opportunities missed

Queen’s University environmental scientist John Smol was among the scientific advisors that contributed to the creation of the Oil Sands Monitoring System, announced in Edmonton Friday by Environment Minister Peter Kent and his provincial counterpart Diana McQueen.

As my colleague Tanara McLean reported:

The program aims to create a more “transparent” and cohesive monitoring system. All oilsands Continue reading Oil sands monitoring: Some positives but some opportunities missed

Solberg: "Bit of Keystone Kops" politics from Harper on OAS changes

In Davos, Switzerland last week, Prime Minister Stephen Harper had this short bit in a much longer speech that touched on many topics:

“We have already taken steps to limit the growth of our health care spending over that period. We must do the same for our retirement income system.  Fortunately, the centerpiece of that system, the Canada Pension Plan, is fully funded, actuarially sound and does not need to be changed. For those elements of the system that are not funded, we will make the changes necessary to ensure sustainability for the next generation while not affecting current recipients.”

That set off a firestorm of political debate back in Canada that continued all week. Yesterday, Continue reading Solberg: "Bit of Keystone Kops" politics from Harper on OAS changes

Enough of the candidates, let's hear from some NDP voters!

We’ve been doing our darndest to cover the NDP leadership contest on the Daily Brief because we think it’s important. Whoever wins will get the keys to Stornoway (a more comfortable home than 24 Sussex Drive, if you ask some who’ve lived in both). That person will also be the Leader of the Official Opposition. And, throughout Canada’s political history, leaders of the official opposition have tended to be the chief combatant for the job of prime minister.  So this is a big deal. Continue reading Enough of the candidates, let's hear from some NDP voters!

Peggy Nash on her fundraising numbers

Last night on the Daily Brief I asked NDP Leadership candidate Peggy Nash about her fundraising numbers for the the last quarter of 2011. They were pretty good. Her campaign has raised $108,000. But a couple of candidates were, at Dec. 31, a long way back. Niki Ashton’s campaign had raised just $10,000 and Romeo Saganash had raised $18,000. I asked Nash about those numbers as well. Continue reading Peggy Nash on her fundraising numbers

On the subject of those fake new Canadians at the citizenship ceremony

Well, I must say, that story that moved on the CP wire this morning by Parliamentary Press Gallery colleague Jennifer Ditchburn sure had us talking in our Sun Media newsroom in Ottawa. (And in other newsrooms as well apparently!)

I don’t want to knock Ditchburn’s writing on this because it’s a bit of a complex story but it’s quite clear from many reactions to those who read her story that many of you finished reading the first draft of her piece (it has since been updated) and came way with the belief that Sun News Network colluded with the political staff working in Immigration Minister Jason Kenney’s office to produce and broadcast a ceremony for Citizenship Week that was stuffed with fake new Canadians. Continue reading On the subject of those fake new Canadians at the citizenship ceremony