Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou Leaves Canada on a Flight to China

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(Bloomberg) -- Almost three years after she was arrested at a Vancouver airport, Huawei Technologies Co. Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou left Canada on a flight to China on Friday afternoon, according to a person familiar with the matter.

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Meng, who had reached a deal to end U.S. criminal charges against her, departed on a chartered Air China plane bound for Shenzhen, where Huawei has its headquarters, the person added.

Under an agreement with federal prosecutors, Meng, 49, admitted she had misled HSBC Holdings Plc about the telecom company’s business with Iran, in violation of U.S. sanctions on that nation. Meng will face no further prosecution and could see the charges against her dismissed by December 2022 if she complies with the terms of the agreement.

But a larger racketeering indictment is still pending against Huawei, which grinds on even as a broader rivalry between Washington and Beijing sees relations between the two powers at their lowest point in years. Meng’s arrest sparked a diplomatic crisis and retaliatory trade measures by China, which has called her prosecution a politically motivated attack on one of its chief tech champions. With the bank fraud, conspiracy and wire fraud charges against her, Meng, the daughter of Ren Zhengfei, Huawei’s founder, faced as many as 30 years in prison if convicted in the U.S.

The Justice Department said Meng’s admissions “confirm the crux of the government’s allegations in the prosecution of this financial fraud -- that Meng and her fellow Huawei employees engaged in a concerted effort to deceive global financial institutions, the U.S. government and the public about Huawei’s activities in Iran.”

The company has pleaded not guilty.

Supreme Court of British Columbia Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes discharged Meng after the U.S. said it would withdraw its extradition request. The development clears the way for Meng, who had been under house arrest in Vancouver since December 2018, to return home to China.

Pro-Meng supporters gathered outside court in Vancouver on Friday chanting “Not guilty!” After the hearing, Meng gave big hugs to colleagues as she left the courtroom amid applause. One picked her up off her feet. She thanked her boosters, the Chinese consul and the Canadian people and apologized “for the inconvenience.”