Skip to content

US Interrogating Chinese Ship and Airline Crew About CCP Membership: Chinese State Media

  • Asia

Trudeau Says Economic Statement Will Be Put to Confidence Vote in House of Commons

OTTAWA—Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says tens of billions in new spending measures the Liberals are proposing for families and businesses will be put to a vote that could risk toppling his Liberal minority government. Speaking outside his Ottawa residence today, Trudeau says a vote on the fall economic statement will be one that will test the confidence the House of Commons has in his government. Failure to gather the necessary support during such a vote would mean the minority government falls, which could plunge the country into a federal election contest. Trudeau says he’s confident the Liberals will have enough opposition support given the need households and businesses have for many of the proposed measures. The Liberals’ fall economic statement Monday proposed just over $25 billion new spending to top…

US Interrogating Chinese Ship and Airline Crew About CCP Membership: Chinese State Media

The Chinese regime claimed that “U.S. law enforcement personnel” were interrogating the crew of Chinese civilian ships and airlines about their Communist Party membership, and threatened to retaliate against the United States in response.

China’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said during a Nov. 30 press conference that U.S. personnel were checking Chinese vehicles arriving at American ports of entry, and asking crew members about their Chinese Communist Party (CCP) membership.

“That is a severe political provocation to China,” Hua said.

She claimed that Beijing authorities had already lodged complaints to the United States, and that China would take action should the latter continue such investigations. She did not provide further details about the retaliation.

Chinese state-run newspaper China Daily published a report on Nov. 30 stating that CCP members recently faced repeated questioning upon arrival in the United States.

According to the report, as of Nov. 11 this year, crews of 21 Chinese ships were investigated by U.S. authorities when their vessels anchored at American harbors. Meanwhile, crew members of 16 Chinese airplanes were investigated since September.

“Sometimes, the investigation lasted several hours, and U.S. forces even asked the crew members why they joined the CCP,” the report stated.

The U.S. State Department did not respond to a request for comment.

Hua also said during a Monday press conference that U.S. authorities asked each crew member whether they were Party members, and if they answered in the affirmative, the U.S. officials would ask for more information about their Party membership.

US Interrogating Chinese Ship and Airline Crew About CCP Membership: Chinese State Media This combination of pictures created on May 14, 2020 shows recent portraits of U.S. President Donald Trump and China’s leader Xi Jinping. (JIM WATSON,PETER KLAUNZER/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Amid the U.S. administration’s growing scrutiny over the CCP’s threats to national security, in July, the New York Times, citing anonymous sources, reported that President Donald Trump was considering banning CCP members from entering the country.

At the time, Mike Pillsbury, director of the Center for Chinese Strategy at the Washington-based think tank Hudson Institute, told the Wall Street Journal that the ban would amount to an effort by the administration “to delegitimize the Communist Party and its 90 million members.”

Pillsbury then analyzed that the Chinese regime is unlikely to retaliate with real punitive measures. “The Chinese will not have a counter measure in terms of banning all Republican members from visiting China, which would be absurd,” Pillsbury said in the interview.

Focus News: US Interrogating Chinese Ship and Airline Crew About CCP Membership: Chinese State Media

Tories Push for Parliamentary Committee Study Into Failed Vaccine Deal

OTTAWA鈥擳he federal Conservatives are calling for a parliamentary committee to probe the Liberal government’s plan to refit a National Research Council facility in Montreal to start producing a COVID-19 vaccine. The government announced the $44-million project in May as part of a partnership between the NRC and a Chinese company to develop a made-in-Canada vaccine. By August, the Liberals confirmed the partnership with CanSino Biologics had fallen apart, after the Chinese government had blocked shipments of vaccine samples meant to be used in clinical trials in Canada. Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole has criticized the Liberals for putting too much faith in Beijing, and blamed the failed deal for Canada being late to order vaccines from other foreign companies. The proposed committee probe would look at the investment intended to upgrade…