Commentary Meng Wanzhou, the daughter of Huawei’s founder and its chief financial officer, has been fighting extradition to the United States ever since December 2018, when Canadian authorities arrested her at the Vancouver airport at the behest of the U.S. government. Her Canadian lawyers argued, among numerous other points over three years now, that the extradition request should be denied since the charges against her—committing bank fraud in an attempt to sell embargoed computer equipment to Iran’s largest mobile-phone operator—violated Meng’s Charter rights. “Fundamental justice demands that Meng not be extradited to face trial on these legally and factually flawed allegations,” and that she be free to leave Vancouver and return to China. In truth, all that is keeping Meng from returning to China is rule by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Had Meng and her father been citizens of almost any other nation on Earth, and had Huawei not been China’s …