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Friend concerned for detained Canadian after fundraising effort shut down

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GoFundMe said the campaign in Spavor’s name was shut down because its third-party payment processor, which made the decision, was unable to handle the donations. (Photo: @gofundme/Twitter)

OTTAWA — A friend of Michael Spavor says he is worried about the detained Canadian’s well-being and financial future now that an online fund-raising effort in his name has been derailed.

Andray Abrahamian, a lecturer at Stanford University in California, was among the organizers of a GoFundMe campaign for Spavor, arrested last month in China for allegedly endangering Chinese national security.

“I worry about many things, starting with his health and emotional well-being,” Abrahamian said Monday.

GoFundMe said the campaign in Spavor’s name was shut down because its third-party payment processor, which made the decision, was unable to handle the donations.

GoFundMe spokeswoman Rachel Hollis would not elaborate on the reason, but said the fundraising portal relies on such processors to make sure money transfers made online “are securely processed and verified, helping us to keep GoFundMe the safest place to donate online.”

The backers were told “it was for a ‘terms and conditions’ violation, but nothing more specific than that,” Abrahamian said. “Basically, nearly everybody’s money was refunded Friday without notice, then the next day the page was shut down.”

Spavor is director of the Paektu Cultural Exchange, an organization that facilitates sporting, cultural, tourism and business exchanges with North Korea — a largely isolated country subject to a number of international sanctions over its nuclear-weapons program.

He and fellow Canadian Michael Kovrig, a diplomat on leave from Global Affairs Canada, were taken into Chinese custody on security grounds in December. The actions came just days after Canadian authorities in Vancouver arrested Meng Wanzhou, a senior executive with Chinese firm Huawei Technologies, who is wanted by the U.S. on fraud charges.

Abrahamian said the fundraising effort was intended to create “a little pot of money” to help with Spavor’s legal fees or other costs and, when the stressful experience is over, to aid his recovery and readjustment.

“Once the issue with China is resolved, he probably won’t be able to transit through that country, meaning he won’t be able to continue his work promoting exchanges,” Abrahamian said.

“So we wanted to help buy him some time while he figures out what’s next. We also were hoping his family could use the money to have his possessions collected and shipped back to Canada.

“We’re trying to figure out how to best solicit donations again, but are afraid we won’t be as successful as this past attempt. It was Christmastime, after all.”

Many western analysts see China’s detention of the Canadians as retaliation for Ottawa’s co-operation to date with the U.S. on Meng’s pending extradition.

Kovrig and Spavor have each had a single consular visit from John McCallum, Canada’s ambassador to China.

Canada has expressed deep concern about the “arbitrary detention” of the men in calling for their immediate release.

The latest setback for Spavor comes as a Canadian parliamentary delegation, long scheduled to visit China, does what it can to help secure the pair’s freedom.

A Monday opinion piece in the China Daily newspaper, published by the country’s Communist Party, accused Canada of acting “as a loyal adherent of the U.S. in the Meng detention drama.”

“By continuing to follow the U.S., either passively or actively, Canada will eventually harm its national interests,” said the article by Li Qingsi, a professor of international studies at Renmin University in China. “If Canada insists on following the old track, it may not benefit much from a big trading partner like China.”

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