Canadian Foreign Ministry Official Urged Canadian Students to Study in China Despite Detention of Kovrig, Spavor

Canadian Foreign Ministry Official Urged Canadian Students to Study in China Despite Detention of Kovrig, Spavor
Canadians Michael Spavor (L) and Michael Kovrig have been detained in China since shortly after Canada arrested Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou in Vancouver in December 2018. AP Photo
|Updated:

OTTAWA—Eight days after Chinese authorities imprisoned Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, a senior Canadian foreign ministry official urged Canadian students to apply for a program to study in China.

Sarah Taylor, the director-general of the north-Asia bureau at Global Affairs Canada, made the pitch for the 45-year-old Canada-China Scholarship Exchange Program during a Dec. 18 event at the Chinese Embassy in Ottawa.