Kovrig, Spavor supporters march in support of freeing the prisoners, as China objects
OTTAWA — As Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor mark 1,000 days in separate Chinese prisons, their supporters are taking to the streets of Ottawa and beyond on Sunday to push for their freedom.
China’s ambassador to Canada says the marchers and others are harming relations between the two countries by hyping the milestone with unwarranted accusations against his government.
That left the political stalemate between Canada and China unbroken ahead of Sunday’s marches, which are expected to take place throughout Canada and around the world and are shaping up to be the largest public outpourings of support for the men who have come to be known in Canada and abroad as “the two Michaels.”
Kovrig, a Canadian diplomat on leave to an international organization, and Spavor, an entrepreneur who tried to forge ties to North Korea, were arrested in apparent retaliation for the RCMP’s arrest of Chinese high-tech executive Meng Wanzhou on Dec. 1, 2018 as she was transiting through Vancouver airport.