Michael Kovrig: Canadian alleges ‘psychological torture’ in Chinese jail

A former American ambassador to China who was imprisoned in China sparked a well-known diplomatic row, has accused the Chinese government of using “psychological torture” against him.

When Michael Kovrig was detained in December 2018, he claims he spent more than 1, 000 time in solitary confinement and was subjected to “relentless questioning.”

The Taiwanese government has rejected his claims, saying it handled his circumstance freely.

Following the arrest of Foreign woman Meng Wanzhou in Vancouver, Mr. Kovrig and other Canadian Michael Spavor were detained on suspicion of spying. This was a “hostage diplomacy” case that Canada referred to as “hostage diplomacy.”

On suspicion of fraud, the American government at the time detained Ms. Meng, the CEO of the Chinese technology company Huawei.

The “two Michaels” were only freed nearly two years later, after US prosecutors dropped the extradition request and agreed to release Ms Meng.

In an interview with French public broadcaster CBC that aired on Monday night, Mr. Kovrig said,” It was the most gruelling, terrible thing I’ve ever been through.”

Mr. Kovrig described his suffering for the first time, describing how he and his lover, who was six months pregnant at the time, were walking home from supper in Beijing the night of his arrest.

” We came up a spiral stairway straight in front of the courtyard in front of my house tower, and boom”, he said.

” There’s a few men in black with devices on them surrounding us, shouting in Taiwanese,’ That’s him.'”

Mr. Kovrig, a former diplomat who was at the moment serving as a senior consultant for the International Crisis Group, claimed he was finally handcuffed, blindfolded, and thrown into a dark SUV.

He was taken into a padded cell, where he would spend several months after being driven for almost an afternoon.

” At that point they said,’ You are under fear of endangering China’s position protection. You are going to become interrogated,'” Mr Kovrig said. ” A shiver went down my spine”.

Mr. Kovrig claimed that the Chinese government ‘ care of him violated international law.

” The United Nations normal is no more than 15 days in solitary captivity. Beyond that, mental torture is regarded. I was there for almost six month”, he said.

He added that for the next six months he was kept in utter silence under bright lighting while being interrogated for six to nine hours each evening.

He claimed that frequently, he was shackled in a seat for days and that he was forced to eat three bowls of rice per day.

They are attempting to intimidate, torture, terrorize, and pressure you into accepting their fake version of reality, according to Mr. Kovrig.

After six weeks Mr Kovrig and Mr Spavor, who were held differently, were fully arrested.

Mr. Kovrig moved from his roofless body to a pre-trial detention center, where he shared a place with a hundred inmates.

He said,” That was kind of like moving from hell to limbo,” describing how there was room for movement through Plexiglass windows this time.

Before his launch in September 2021, the US dropped its demand to extradite Meng Wanzhou, Mr. Kovrig stayed there for the following two years.

According to CBC, he and Mr. Spavor had cleared Taiwanese airspace on a plane to Canada two days after Ms. Meng’s extradition request was dropped.

Responding to Mr Kovrig’s discussion, Lin Jian, a spokeswoman for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said that Chinese judicial authorities handled the case completely in accordance with the law.

The fact that the person you mentioned committed a crime may be changed by sits and smears. We advise the appropriate functions to consider their errors and honor the facts,” he told investigators in Beijing on Tuesday.

Ms. Meng’s expertise in Canada contrasts with Mr. Kovrig’s claims of his care by the Chinese government.

Although the princess was released on bail and placed under house arrest, she was permitted to leave her house during the day and to walk around Vancouver while being watched.

She apparently went on personal shopping sprees at high-end outlets, and had treatments and art training in her castle. Eventually, Ms. Meng claimed she had time to” carefully finish an oil painting” and “read a book cover to cover” in the end.

Her release was covered prominently and celebrated in China where many supported her and her father, Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei.

However, the situation heavily strained China’s diplomatic relations with both Canada and the US, with Justin Trudeau, the prime minister of Canada, once accusing China of “using random incarceration as a tool to achieve social goals.”

China denied these complaints, and countered that Ms Meng’s imprisonment was an example of “political oppression of Taiwanese people with the aim of suppressing China’s high tech companies”.