Medicine Hat News

Tories push Liberals to decide 5G, Huawei amid China imprisonme­nt of Kovrig, Spavor

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

Chinese telecom giant Huawei rose to dominance by stealing the technology of the defunct Canadian firm Nortel, Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole says.

O’Toole levelled the industrial-espionage charge against Huawei and the Chinese Communist Party on Tuesday as he announced that the Conservati­ves are pushing the Liberals to decide within 30 days which companies can provide Canada’s next-generation 5G wireless internet technology.

“The rise of Huawei was itself facilitate­d by years of industrial espionage conducted by China against Nortel,” O’Toole told a press conference on Parliament Hill.

“Intellectu­al-property theft, counterfei­ting and digital piracy are not exceptions to our dealings with China. They are the reality, and it’s high time our government and many corporate leaders realize that,” the Conservati­ve leader added.

“We may have lost Nortel to

Huawei ... but we can and must learn from it. Because if we don’t, we have to accept that another company will be next.”

Nortel Networks Corp., a once mighty Canadian telecom giant, filed for bankruptcy in 2009, becoming one of the country’s most spectacula­r business failures. Two years later, Nortel executed the biggest patent sale in history, raising billions in cash, when it auctioned off 6,000 patents to a consortium that included Apple and Microsoft.

The Conservati­ves introduced a motion in the House of Commons that demands the government decide whether Huawei ought to be banned from participat­ing in Canadian 5G networks amid the ongoing diplomatic dispute between Canada and the People’s Republic.

China has imprisoned two Canadians, Michael Kovrig and

Michael Spavor, in apparent retaliatio­n for the RCMP’s arresting Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou nearly two years ago on a U.S. extraditio­n warrant.

The United States is pressuring Canada and its allies in the Five Eyes intelligen­ce-sharing network to ban Huawei because it views the company as an espionage arm of the Chinese state, a charge the company denies.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was noncommitt­al Tuesday on the timing of his government’s long-awaited 5G decision. He reiterated his government’s position that it is relying on the advice of security and intelligen­ce agencies, is consulting with allies, and is committed to keeping Canadians and their businesses safe.

O’Toole said he wants the matter debated in the Commons and wants a new strategy for relations with

China, because the Liberals have not done enough stand up to its intimidati­on of Canada.

Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said during question period that he is open to working with the Conservati­ves on national security and foreign policy and would be prepared to propose constructi­ve amendments moving forward.

Champagne said the government is working on a new plan to deal with China because China is not the same country it was four years ago and Canada needs a plan to respond to the “new reality.”

O’Toole said China poses long-standing domestic risks, including threats from its foreign agents to Chinese-Canadians and the peddling of antiwester­n propaganda through post-secondary Confucius Institute partnershi­ps as well as Chinese media outlets.

“It is now fashionabl­e in some quarters to say that say that standing up for human rights is anti-Chinese racism and that denouncing Chinese state bullying is paternalis­tic,” said O’Toole.

“When a dictatorsh­ip starts having so much influence, to the point that protecting Canadian citizens on Canadian soil is now an open question for a debate, you know we have a problem.”

 ??  ?? Erin O’Toole
Erin O’Toole

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