China's
Mounting Challenge to Our National Sovereignty
Foreign-staffed mines in BC, Nexen on the block and
the FIPA giveaway... wake up Canada!
Tuesday October 23, 2012
By Bill Tieleman
"Let China sleep, for
when she awakes, she will shake the world."
- Napoleon Bonaparte,
1769-1821
How will Canada deal with
the China challenge to our national sovereignty?
It may be the most important
question facing the country, with far more dire consequences than the election
of a separatist provincial government in Quebec.
Is Canada
sleepwalking towards a future day when a communist-ruled undemocratic China has
significant control of key parts of our economy? The evidence is mounting.
This month we learned
the BC Liberal and federal Conservative governments are jointly allowing up to
2,000 miners from China to operate as many as four planned coal mines, despite
that country having the deadliest coal industry in the world.
The Canadian Dehua
International Mines Group, which is planning all four mines, claims it cannot
find any Canadian coal miners to fill the jobs, but the United Steelworkers
union discovered that ads advertising the positions listed speaking Mandarin as
a requirement. The jobs also pay as little as half the going Canadian pay rates
for miners.
A spokesperson for
one of the companies partnering in the mine, HD Mining
International, said
the ads were a mistake and have been withdrawn.
Then there's the
proposed $15-billion purchase of Calgary-based oil and gas giant Nexen Inc. by
Chinese state-owned China National
Offshore Oil Corporation -- a deal the federal government must
approve before it can proceed.
Nexen shareholders
have already approved the
acquisition and no wonder -- CNOOC is willing to pay a 66 per cent
premium on its average trading price.
But will the
Conservative government risk both Chinese government and Nexen shareholder
anger by rejecting the deal as not having a "net benefit" to Canada?
The odds seemed
strongly stacked against that.
Interest in
resources, telecom
Conservative
International Trade Minister Ed Fast was quick to say that the government
decision last week to reject the $5.2 billion takeover of Calgary-based
Progress Energy Resources by Petronas, the Malaysian state-owned company,
doesn't mean the CNOOC acquisition of Nexen will be rejected.
"This decision
does not set a precedent because every single application is considered on its
own merits," Fast said.
"Each application has its own specific circumstances that are being
brought to bear."
That's hardly
reassuring to anyone concerned about loss of Canadian ownership of key natural
resources.
Yet key U.S.
Democrats oppose the Nexen takeover by CNOOC, something that may affect
Harper's decision.
Howard Dean, the
influential former Vermont governor and Democratic presidential nomination
contender, is warning Canada could face a U.S. backlash if it authorizes a
CNOOC purchase of Nexen.
"I personally
don't think that's a good idea for either Canadian or American assets,"
Dean told
Tom Clark on Global News program The West Block.
There are also
questions about the role of Chinese telecom giant Huawei Technologies in
Canada.
Earlier this month
the Conservative government made an unusual comment about the possibility that
Huawei might bid on rebuilding Ottawa's telecommunications network.
A U.S. Congressional
committee alleged on Oct.
9 that: Huawei was "already known to be a major perpetrator of
cyber espionage." Huawei "unequivocally
denies" those claims.
The next day Andrew
MacDougall, Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper's communications
director, made this less than cryptic comment: "The government's going to
be choosing carefully in the construction of this network, and it has invoked
the national security exception for the building of this network.
"I'm not going
to comment on any one company in particular. I'll leave it to you if you think
Huawei should be a part of a Canadian government security system,"
MacDougall said.
Ironically, perhaps,
many Canadians are the proud owners
of Huawei cell phones.
The biggest threat
But perhaps the
biggest threat is Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper's plan to
implement the Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection
Agreement (FIPA) by Nov. 1.
Gus Van Harten, an
Osgoode Hall law professor and global authority on international trade deals,
says he is "deeply concerned about the implications for Canada" and urges the
government to reconsider based on 14 different reasons.
"The legal
consequences of the treaty will be irreversible by any Canadian court,
legislature or other decision-maker for 31 years after the treaty is given
effect," Van Harten wrote in a letter to Harper, adding that it has a
15-year minimum term.
Other key arguments
against the China-Canada
treaty include that in order to sue under its provisions, a Chinese
company requires only a minority share in any Canadian enterprise or other
asset in Canada and that "Chinese asset-owners in Canada will be able, at
their option, to challenge Canadian legislative, executive, or judicial
decisions outside of the Canadian legal system and Canadian courts."
In another analysis,
The Tyee's Andrew Nikiforuk describes the agreement as "economic
treason."
Napoleon Bonaparte
eventually met his Waterloo -- is the Canada-China deal our fatal losing battle
on national sovereignty?
.
8 comments:
Successive Liberal and Conservative governments have sole out our nation's resource industries.
Over 70% of the tars sands are owned by foreign firms.
Any Chinese miner who complained of health or safety conditions would be on the next plane back to Beijing.
Hi Bill.
Thanks for running the Red flag up the flag pole. We get it. Unfortunately THEY don't get it. Well I think they get it but they don't care what we think. We have 8 days to stop the implementation of this Chinese Free Trade agreement and short of doing something illegal I don't see anyway of stopping Harper and the rest of his CONspirators from actually going through with this traitorous back room deal.
We can run it up the red flag all we want but no one who has the power to stop the implementation of this treaty is going to do anything about. Maybe the Governor General is in a position to override the government but the GG is a political appointment of the PM.
We have seen how "free trade" protected us from the U.S. of A. vis a vis the Soft Wood Lumber wars. Well we could get out of that deal in 6 months. It will take 15 years to escape this little bit of wonder foisted upon us by the Harper CONspirators. 15 years of secret back door manipulations of our resource sovereignty.
People are getting sick over the thought of not being able to stop this sell out. Waiting until an election in 2015 ... out of the question. We have 8 more days to go until we lose control over our country.
Am I being over the top and everything will be OK? I don't think so.
"The Capitalists will sell us the ropes we will hang them with" . . . V.I. Lenin
Well, our Canadian and BC running dog leaderships are proving this old Communist line to be true.
Today all of the political parties pander to this political-correctness; in BC it doesn't matter if its Clark, Dix, or Cummins.
You wave some off-shore dollars under their cold-wet-noses, and they bark and beg on command.
Combine this with tainted ethnic political money and volunteers buying influence and our ON-THE-TAKE government, they are truly lap dogs.
In 1989 "we" all thought we had won the Cold War, far from it . . . as the "now for profit Reds" are invading via the backdoor.
The question for BC in 2013 is just how much rope will we sell them?
The GREAT SATAN
To answer The Great Satan with three words
"already too much"
And, people have jumped down my neck for saying, BC needs to get the hell out of Harper's Canada. This isn't Canada anymore anyway.
We need to take this province back, or we are lost to Red China. We need to be our own little country. Campbell thieved and sold everything of value out of BC, he got his dirty hands on. Campbell too, sold our resources to Red China.
CSIS warned of Red China's huge inroads into Canada. They specifically mentioned BC. But, no-one listened. We have been saying, watch out for BC, since Campbell's corrupt time in office.
Canada is Harper's garden of evil. I for one, don't want to be in Harper's evil garden. However, everyone squawks about, oh nooo! Split our country up, how terrible! This isn't our country anymore, it's going to be Communist China's, most of Canada already is lost to China.
BC shouldn't get out of Harper's Canada??? Convince me.
I note that BC Minister of Jobs Pat Bell takes issue with my column in 24 hours and The Tyee. I am happy to give his views here. The letter can be found online at: http://www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/ministries/jobs-tourism-and-skills-training/factsheets/letter-to-editor.html
Oct. 24, 2012
The Editor
The Tyee
In Tuesday's column, Bill Tieleman cited Napoleon Bonaparte's warning that China would wake and shake the world. This kind of outcry belongs to the 1800s, not 2012.
B.C. is not looking to Napoleon for advice on our province's economic growth strategy - and nor should we.
The fact is, China represents the world's most rapidly growing economy, and attracting investment from this country will lead to long-term jobs and greater economic prosperity for all British Columbians.
Doing business with China is not the same as ceding control of our economy, as Mr. Tieleman suggests. In addition, the contention that 2,000 temporary foreign workers from China will be operating up to four coal mines in B.C., taking long-term jobs from British Columbians, is false.
The mining company in question has approval to bring 200 temporary foreign workers - not the 2,000 Mr. Tieleman reported - to British Columbia to fill temporary, exploratory jobs (six to eight months) in a sector already experiencing a skills shortage. Assuming either mine becomes fully operational, it could create hundreds of long-term jobs, and qualified British Columbians will be first in line.
While many global markets are facing challenging times, China's economy continues to grow, and B.C.'s economy will grow with it. As long as the country remains one of B.C.'s most important social and economic partners, our province will continue to open its doors, not close them.
Pat Bell
Minister of Jobs, Tourism and Skills Training
You can put a strong rope leash on BC Minister of Jobs (and payoffs) PAT BELL and run him past the Fraser Institute (another bunch of for profit tyrants) any day.
The GREAT SATAN
..."The fact is, China represents the world's most rapidly growing economy, and attracting investment from this country will lead to long-term jobs and greater economic prosperity for all British Columbians. "...
Why do people like Pat Bell, B.C.'s Minister of Jobs, Tourism and Skill Training, always trot out the 'jobs and prosperity' chestnut when they're trying to sell Canadians something we don't want or need? Let's cut the you-know-what - selling Canada's resources to China will NOT result in jobs and prosperity for Canadians. It will result in Canada becoming a colony of China. Does anyone really think that Communist China, with a population 30 times bigger than ours, will spend a nano-second being concerned about OUR economy, jobs and prosperity? Once this deal is signed, what China can't take legally, which will be a lot, they will take by force. Count on it. Anyone engaged in this kind of free-trade dealing with China is essentially a traitor to Canada. No doubt a well-off traitor, but a traitor nevertheless.
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