Medicine Hat News

Huawei’s ambitions for Canada stalled by rift with China, security expert says

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Huawei Technologi­es Co.’s push to become a leading supplier of 5G technology in Canada appears to be in jeopardy after the Chinese tech giant’s CFO suffered a legal setback in a B.C. court, prompting an angry response from Beijing.

“The chance of them being a leading supplier is next to none. I think the chance of them being involved at all in the network is still up in the air,” Jonathan Berkshire Miller, an expert in internatio­nal security issues with the Macdonald Laurier Institute, said Thursday.

His comments came a day after a B.C. Supreme Court judge ruled that the U.S. extraditio­n case against Meng Wanzhou, a senior Huawei executive and daughter of the founder, can proceed to the next stage.

Miller said Canada has attempted to keep its decision about Huawei’s role in 5G networks separate from the Meng case but said China has retaliated by arresting two Canadians - ex-diplomat Michael Kovrig and entreprene­ur Michael Spavor — and blocking some Canadian exports to China, including canola.

China’s behaviour in the Meng case adds to the perception that it can’t be trusted to allow Huawei to be independen­t of Beijing and abide by the local laws where it does business, Miller said.

“I think there’s going to be significan­t pressure (against Huawei) both domestical­ly - from parts of the national security community - and also from our allies.”

For Canada’s telecom industry and the federal government in Ottawa, Huawei has long been known as an important equipment supplier - one that U.S. officials consider a significan­t threat to national security.

That’s largely because Huawei is a major supplier of the equipment needed for wireless networks that could potentiall­y be used to gather sensitive informatio­n for the Chinese government.

IDC Canada vice-president Lawrence Surtees agreed that the Meng case may have given the Trudeau government a way to defer its decisions on Huawei but noted that the main government agency involved with the decision, the Canadian Security Establishm­ent, hasn’t found a reason to block the company.

In addition, he said, excluding

Huawei from Canada could be costly and complicate­d for some of the wireless networks building out their 5G networks, particular­ly the antennae and tower base stations that Huawei has installed in Canada for a decade.

Besides that, he said Huawei has a major research and developmen­t centre for 5G and 6G technology in Ottawa.

Fifth-generation technology — which the government and carriers expect to be a catalyst for future economic growth — will be introduced in stages over about a decade, although the exact timing of the stages is uncertain.

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