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Canada’s Federal Police said Thursday it is investigating reports that China has set up illegal police stations on its soil and is targeting Chinese expatriates.
Various local media, citing a Madrid-based human rights group Defenders of Defendersreported this week that police checkpoints set up in homes, commercial premises and a store in the Toronto area are among 54 worldwide.
China He denied the allegations, saying the establishments were merely offering services such as driver’s license renewals to Chinese citizens abroad.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (PCMP) said in an email sent to AFP that it was investigating “reports of criminal activity against so-called police stations” and that it “takes threats to the safety of people living in Canada”.
He added that he “is aware that foreign governments may seek to intimidate or harm communities or individuals within a country.” Canada”, he added.
Netherlands launched a similar investigation.
What are Chinese “police stations”?
According to Safeguard Defenders, Chinese police use police stations to conduct police operations in foreign territory and put pressure on Chinese citizens to force them to return to their country to face criminal charges.
In the September report NGOs said they had “a much more sinister and completely illegal purpose” than Beijing recognizes, including tracking and targeting.
He added that between April 2021 and July 2022, a total of 230,000 Chinese citizens were forcibly returned to their country, mostly from Asian countries, through these methods, which included “threats and harassment of family members at home or directly at home”. .
public broadcaster Canada pointed out that a Chinese journalist and human rights activist who moved to Canada in 1989, he claimed to have been repeatedly harassed online by the Chinese authorities.
“Now the station Chinese police (He) is here, just a few kilometers from me, so I’m wondering where else I can escape,” activist Sheng Xue told CBC.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs China said the reports are “completely false” and spokeswoman Mao Ning said her public security organs “strongly observe international law and fully respect the judicial sovereignty of other countries.”
Embassy in Beijing In Ottawa, the statement said the offices are staffed by “local volunteers, not Chinese police officers” who help their citizens with paperwork and are “not involved in any criminal investigation or related activity.
(According to AFP)
Source: RPP

I’m Liza Grey, an experienced news writer and author at the Buna Times. I specialize in writing about economic issues, with a focus on uncovering stories that have a positive impact on society. With over seven years of experience in the news industry, I am highly knowledgeable about current events and the ways in which they affect our daily lives.