A
Canadian man who ran a cafe in China
is charged with spying and stealing state secrets, state media reported Thursday.
Kevin
Garratt was indicted by prosecutors in the northeastern city of Dandong, where
his trial will be held, the state-run Xinhua news agency said.
Authorities detained Garratt and his wife Julia in August 2014.
She was released on bail last year, CNN partner CBC News reported, but her husband remained in
custody pending an investigation.
Chinese
investigators "found evidence which implicates Garratt in accepting tasks
from Canadian espionage agencies to gather intelligence in China," Xinhua
said.
The
couple's children have decried their parents' 2014 arrest as ridiculous.
Simeon
Garratt told Hong Kong's South China Morning Post that the allegations were
"wildly absurd" and "crazy."
At
the time, he described his parents as "openly Christian" and said
they were involved in sending food aid to North Korea. He told the newspaper
the accusations "(sound) like something somebody made up. I really don't
know why. It's just so absurd."
Canada
finds the indictment "concerning" and has discussed the case with the
Chinese government, a Global Affairs Canada spokesperson said. Consular
officials are providing assistance to the couple and monitoring developments,
the spokesperson said.
Canada's
Conservative Party called for officials to push for Garratt's release and said
it was concerned the indictment could be part of a broader crackdown on
international nongovernmental organization workers in China.
"This
case has been concerning to Canadians for many months. We are also deeply
concerned for Mr. Garratt's wife, Julia, who remains under a form of house
arrest in China," the statement said. "We are urging the government of
Canada to use every diplomatic avenue available to advocate on behalf of the
Garratts."
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