Canadian municipalities are walking straight into a meticulously laid trap, trading national security for the empty promise of foreign cash.
The City of Prince George, B.C., is facing intense blowback after welcoming delegates from Jiangmen, China, to discuss a potential "sister city" agreement. Human rights advocacy groups are sounding an urgent alarm, warning that these seemingly innocent civic partnerships are a dangerous front. Critics point out the staggering absurdity of the pairing: Jiangmen is a massive metropolis of over 4 million people, while Prince George is a small town of just 77,000. There is zero logical cultural or economic baseline for this agreement; it is a calculated political move by Beijing to gain an inroad into local Canadian governance.
The timing of this courtship could not be more treacherous. This push for municipal influence comes directly alongside shocking revelations of widespread Chinese interference across Canada—including the operations of at least five illicit, secret Chinese police stations used to monitor and terrorize dissidents on Canadian soil. For decades, the Chinese Communist Party has weaponized its United Front Work Department to convert sister-city agreements into active platforms for covert foreign influence, economic espionage, and the mobilization of diaspora communities to serve the regime's interests.
While countries like Sweden, the Netherlands, and the Czech Republic have begun aggressively severing their sister-city ties with China after realizing they had fallen prey to totalitarian infiltration, some Canadian local governments remain dangerously blind. By allowing the CCP to establish institutional roots in small-town municipal politics, local leaders are opening the door to hostile foreign interference right in front of our eyes.
#UnveiledChina #ForeignInterference #PrinceGeorgeBC #SisterCityTrap #UnitedFront #ChinaEspionage #CanadianSecurity #CCPInfluence
Human rights groups are raising concerns over a possible sister city agreement between Prince George, B.C., and Jiangmen, China, warning such partnerships can be used by Beijing to expand political influence and transnational repression.
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