Meng Wanzhou's bail hearing will continue tomorrow, and the US has not yet submitted an extradition application

At 10 a.m. local time on December 10 in Vancouver (2 a.m. on December 11 Beijing time), in Room 20 of the British Columbia Supreme Court in Vancouver, Meng Wanzhou, the chief financial officer of Huawei, was detained in Canada for the second bail hearing.The court is open.Meng Wanzhou is still wearing the green blouse that is the uniform of the detention center, and her husband Liu Xiaozong sits in the auditorium behind her left.

The prosecution and the defense had a fierce confrontation over the conditions of bail and whether Meng Wanzhou could be adequately monitored after bail.

The defense lawyer proposed a bail worth 15 million Canadian dollars (about 77.34 million yuan), including cash and her husband's two properties in Vancouver.Meng Wanzhou's husband will be her community guarantor. Meng Wanzhou's bail hearing: the judge pointed out that the US government has not yet formally requested extradition

Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou's bail hearing in Canada was inconclusive on the 10th, and the judge postponed the hearing to continue on the 11th.

Dongwang reported that the judge pointed out that the U.S. government has not yet formally proposed the extradition of Meng. The U.S. side has 60 days to make an extradition request. In theory, if the U.S. side does not propose extradition within this period, the detainees will be released.The judge has doubts about whether non-B.C. residents can be guarantors and announced that the case will continue tomorrow.

Judge William Ehrcke cited his past experience and cases and pointed out that the hearing would take months or even years. He asked Meng Wanzhou's lawyer how Meng's husband, Liu Xiaozong, could ensure that his wife would stay in the country; he also questioned whether Liu Xiaozong could stay in CanadaMonths, if not years, until the extradition hearing is over, noting that the bond is only a secondary consideration.

The representative lawyer pointed out that in Liu's Chinese passport, the Canadian visa is valid until February 6 next year, and he should be able to stay in the country for 6 months.Afterwards, three plans were proposed: Liu returned to Hong Kong first, and then re-entered Canada to obtain another 6 months of visa time; submit an application to extend the visa time; the two daughters are studying in Canada, so he can apply for a guardian visa.

However, the prosecution lawyer later presented new evidence showing that Meng's Canadian permanent resident status had expired for nine years, and pointed out that no Canadian resident could provide her with a letter of proof, all proving that Meng had no close connection with Canada.