Offer of prison access for Canada to win fugitive's extradition
Beijing has made a rare offer in hopes of convincing Canada to extradite Lai Changxing, China's most high-profile fugitive.
The central government promised to allow Canadian embassy officials to visit Lai in prison and conduct third-party medical checks if he were convicted in China, Lai's lawyer David Matas said late on Friday night.
The Winnipeg-based rights lawyer said he believed the concessions were unprecedented.
'I have never seen this,' Matas said. 'It is the one and only time China has agreed to give a foreign country access to one of its prisons.'
Lai, a former Fujian businessman, is accused of running a large-scale criminal ring under the cover of his Yuanhua Group. He fled to Canada in 1999, and Beijing formally applied for his extradition in November 2007.
The Chinese offer - included in recent diplomatic documents Matas said he had seen - accedes to giving Canadian embassy and consular officials unmonitored access to Lai while awaiting trial and following any incarceration, assurances of legal representation during the trial, the right to attend the hearing and access to recordings of any pre-hearing interrogations.