Ottawa:Canada is suspending its extradition treaty with Hong Kong as part of a package of responses to the new security law China has imposed on the city, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said here.
"Effective immediately, Canada will not permit the export of sensitive military items to Hong Kong," CBC News quoted Trudeau as saying in a news conference on Friday.
Canada will also treat sensitive goods being exported to Hong Kong as if they were being sent to mainland China.
China's new security law, which came into effect in Hong Kong on Tuesday night, lists four categories of offences - secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with a foreign country or external elements to endanger national security.
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The maximum penalty for each crime is life imprisonment, although the suggested sentence for some minor offences is less than three years' imprisonment.
Suspects can be extradited to mainland China in cases that involve complicated situations of interference by foreign forces; cases in which the local government cannot effectively enforce the law and ones where national security is under serious and realistic threats.
Trudeau suggested the new law was a threat to the "one country, two systems" philosophy that was supposed to last 50 years after the UK returned Hong Kong to China in 1997.