Peace and Security under "The Hammer & Sickle" Chinese Rules, Thanks Carney
Reports from January 2026 meeting in China, Mark Carney has initiated a "new era" of relations with the CCP, characterized as a "strategic partnership" aimed at stabilizing trade and engaging on global issues, including mutual security and policing despite China as a major global security threat especially to the USA and Trump Administration. Especially allowing this sinister development to happen right on his northern border. Of course not, so what action does one realistically expect from Donald Trump, another Venezuela? Yes.
Mark Carny is the world's epitome of a NWO globalist having ruined the UK's economy now is doing the same in Canada and indeed a prodigy under the WEF's Klaus Schwab now retired.
China has no place ruling Canada, lets get that straight. Yet horrifically this is where we Canadians are at today.
Chinese Ambassador to Canada Wang Di published a byline article titled "Advancing the Global Security Initiative Deepening International Law Enforcement Cooperation" on the Ottawa Life Magazine
On Jan. 14, 2026, Chinese Ambassador to Canada Wang Di published a byline article titled "Advancing the Global Security Initiative Deepening International Law Enforcement Cooperation" on the Ottawa Life Magazine. The full article is below:

Today, new types of transnational crimes—especially telefraud and online scams—have become a global scourge and a governance challenge confronting the international community. For example, the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre received 52,000 fraud reports involving CAD 645 million in reported losses in 2024, continuing an upward trend.
In November 2025, the 93rd session of the INTERPOL General Assembly adopted a resolution which highlighted the increasingly rampant crimes such as human trafficking, online phishing, romance scams, and investment fraud by transnational scam centres across the world. The resolution calls on member countries to work together to curb the spread of crime by strengthening intelligence-sharing, conducting joint operations, and supporting the victims.
In April 2022, Chinese President Xi Jinping proposed the Global Security Initiative (GSI), advocating a vision of common, comprehensive, cooperative and sustainable security, with the long-term goal of building a community with shared security. The GSI calls for a new path to security featuring dialogue over confrontation, partnership over alignment and win-win over zero-sum. Guided by the Initiative, China has made full efforts to combat telefraud and online scams, and actively advanced international law enforcement cooperation.
In June 2025, a Canadian law firm in Vancouver fell victim to a Business Email Compromise scam. Fraudsters posed as a regular contact sent fraudulent emails to trick the firm into wiring CAD 2.3 million to a bank account in Hong Kong. After identifying the fraudulent transfer, the bank alerted the Hong Kong Police Force. Thanks to the close cooperation between Chinese and Canadian police forces, the transfer was successfully intercepted and the money recovered finally. As Chris Lynam, Director General of the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, said, “This recovery demonstrates the power of global partnerships in the fight against fraud. Through trusted coordination and timely intelligence exchange with our colleagues of the Hong Kong Police Force, we not only helped a Canadian business avoid a significant loss, but also disrupted criminal activity at the international level.”
China has also actively carried out law enforcement cooperation with countries including Spain, the United Arab Emirates, Myanmar, Indonesia, the Philippines, Laos, Thailand and Cambodia, advancing joint law enforcement operations, dismantling thousands of overseas scam groups and bringing tens of thousands of overseas suspects to justice. In particular, China dealt a devastating blow to the notorious four criminal clans in Kokang region of northern Myanmar, extradited Chen Zhi, the ringleader of a major cross-border gambling and fraud criminal syndicate, from Cambodia to China, and extradited She Zhijiang, the principal of Yatai Xincheng gambling and fraud criminal syndicate, from Thailand to China. This has effectively imposed a strong deterrent against overseas scam syndicates and curbed the rampant telefraud and online scams.
In September 2025, China hosted the Conference of Global Public Security Cooperation Forum in Lianyungang and proposed that relevant countries and regions work together to establish an international alliance to combat telefraud and online scams. The proposal aims to mobilize all stakeholders and the international community to jointly address the governance challenge posed by telefraud and online scams, push for more in depth integration of various security concepts, encourage exchanges and cooperation at a higher level, promote prevention and governance on a broader scale and build a new global framework of combating telefraud and online scams featuring coordinated action and widespread participation.
China looks forward to working with Canada and all the other countries to continue moving in the direction charted by the Global Security Initiative, deepen international law enforcement cooperation, and continue campaigns against new types of transnational crimes such as telefraud and online scams, so as to usher in a better future of lasting peace and universal security.
China accuses Canada of smearing its reputation over alleged secret police stations
Trudeau said the presence of Chinese police stations in Canada 'concerns us enormously'
China on Friday accused Canada of smearing its reputation over allegations China is secretly operating two overseas police stations in Quebec.
Canada should "stop sensationalizing and hyping the matter and stop attacks and smears on China," Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said at a daily briefing.
"China has been ... strictly abiding by international law and respecting all countries' judicial sovereignty," Mao said.
The spokesperson did not comment on the existence of the police stations or whether they were operated by Chinese government authorities.
Canadians of Chinese origin have been victims of activities carried out by the stations, Sgt. Charles Poirier of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Thursday. Canada will not tolerate any type of intimidation, harassment or targeting of diaspora communities, Poirier said.
The RCMP's Integrated National Security Team has opened investigations into the police stations in Montreal and Brossard, a suburb just south of the city, he said.
This is reaction to allegations that two Montreal-area centres are being used as Chinese state-backed "police stations" to intimidate or harass Canadians of Chinese origin.
Mounting allegations of Chinese interference
The investigation adds to mounting evidence of Chinese interference in Canada's internal affairs, including accusations by Ottawa that Beijing tried to influence the last two Canadian elections.
China has denied all of those accusations.
But the RCMP in Quebec said in a statement, "We are carrying out police actions aimed at detecting and disrupting these foreign state-backed criminal activities, which may threaten the safety of persons living in Canada."
Countries including the United States and the Netherlands have conducted similar probes following a report in September by Safeguard Defenders, a Europe-based human rights organization, detailing the presence of dozens of Chinese police "service stations" in major cities globally.
In November, the RCMP also launched an investigation into similar reports of Chinese "police service stations" in the Toronto area. The RCMP in Ontario did not respond to a request for information on that probe on Thursday.
The RCMP's deputy commissioner for federal policing, Michael Duheme, told a parliamentary committee last week that the agency has "taken overt actions" that led to the ceasing of operations at four alleged Chinese police stations.
Stations used to intimidate: human rights group
The Chinese embassy in Ottawa did not respond to a request for comment to Reuters. It has previously said that there are centres outside China run by local volunteers, not Chinese police officers, that aim to help Chinese citizens renew documents and offer other services disrupted during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Spanish human rights organization Safeguard Defenders says China has scores of such stations across the globe, including in the U.K. and the U.S.
In a report last September, it said the stations were used to "harass, threaten, intimidate and force targets to return to China for persecution."
The Chinese Foreign Ministry has previously described the foreign outposts as service stations for Chinese people who are abroad and need help with bureaucratic tasks such as renewing their Chinese driver's licenses.
Such citizen services are normally performed by an embassy or consulate.
'Enormous concern': Trudeau
Beijing has launched dual multi-year campaigns to bring suspects wanted mostly for economic crimes back to China, but says its agents overseas operate in line with international law. U.S. authorities say that has not always been the case.
The outposts have fuelled global concerns that the ruling Chinese Communist Party is seeking control over its citizens abroad, often by using threats against their families and welfare, while undermining democratic institutions overseas and gathering economic and political intelligence.
WATCH | Why RCMP are investigating Chinese 'service stations':
Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly said Thursday concerns over foreign interference were behind Canada's refusal to issue a diplomatic visa to a political operative for China last fall.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the presence of Chinese police stations in Canada "concerns us enormously."
"We've known about the [presence of] Chinese police stations across the country for many months, and we are making sure that the RCMP is following up on it and that our intelligence services take it seriously," Trudeau told reporters in Ottawa.
Canada-China relations nosedived in 2018 after China jailed two Canadians on allegedly trumped-up charges shortly after Canada arrested Meng Wanzhou, chief financial officer of technology giant Huawei and the daughter of the company's founder, on a U.S. extradition request.
They were sent back to Canada in 2021 on the same day Meng returned to China after reaching a deal with U.S. authorities in her case.





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