Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

The high-profile Canada-China relations committee is making a comeback

WATCH: Executive director of Alliance Canada Hong Kong, Cherie Wong, told the House of Commons special committee on China-Canada relations that Hong Kong is not only a foreign issue, and delivered five demands for action – Aug 11, 2020

The Canada-China relations special committee created during the last session of Parliament will be making a comeback as MPs return to work amid surging coronavirus cases.

Story continues below advertisement

In a motion passed Wednesday with unanimous consent, members of Parliament agreed to plans for how to implement remote voting and to bring back a number of the standing committees such as those tasked with studying health, access to information, finance and public safety, among others.

READ MORE: Canada-China relations committee to hold virtual meetings as pandemic stretches on

The Canada-China relations committee, however, was specially created in December 2019 and was not guaranteed that it could resume its work once the House of Commons returned from prorogation, as was the case for standing committees.

The federal parties will have until Oct. 6 to present the members of their caucus that they nominate to sit on the committee, but it’s not clear when the committee will hold its next meeting.

READ MORE: Canadians can be arrested by secret police in Hong Kong for criticizing Beijing, committee hears

The committee frequently made headlines during the previous session of Parliament.

Story continues below advertisement

Meetings included witnesses like Dominic Barton, the Canadian ambassador to China, as well as civil rights activists from Hong Kong who pleaded with the government to act as China imposed a draconian national security law that effectively strips autonomy from Hong Kong.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article