Spectre of Chinese ‘Fox Hunt’ looms over Li’s visit to Ottawa with Trudeau
OTTAWA — It has been something of a taboo in Canada-China relations, a subject rarely raised in public but clearly on the minds of successive Canadian governments in their uneasy courtship of the world’s second-largest economy.
The spectre of China’s “Operation Fox Hunt” — the pursuit and harassment of so-called economic fugitives and other dissidents — cast a shadow Wednesday over the arrival of Chinese Premier Li Keqiang, the first visit of its kind in six years.
In his efforts to revitalize the economic component of Canada’s “hot and cold” relationship with China under the previous Conservative government, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has not shied away from human rights concerns, including during his first trip to China earlier this month.
But the prime minister was forced to address something far more sinister — the fact that agents of the Chinese government are harassing Canadian residents or citizens, hoping to force them back to China to answer for various crimes.


