Stabroek News

Pacific leaders sign on to Australian internet cabling scheme, shutting out China

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SYDNEY, (Reuters) - Pacific nations Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands have signed on to a joint undersea internet cable project, funded mostly by Australia, that forestalls plans by Chinese telecom giant Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd to lay the links itself.

Wednesday’s pact comes as China pushes for influence in a region Australia views as its backyard, amid souring ties after Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull last year accused Beijing of meddling in Canberra’s affairs. Australia will pay twothirds of the project cost of A$136.6 million ($100 million) under the deal, signed on a visit to Brisbane by Solomon Islands Prime Minister Rick Houenipwel­a and Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter O’Neill.

“We spend billions of dollars a year on foreign aid and this is a very practical way of investing in the future economic growth of our neighbours in the Pacific,” Turnbull told reporters about the deal.

The project, for which Australian telecom firm Vocus Group Ltd is building the cable, will link the two nations to the Australian mainland, besides connecting the Solomons capital Honiara with the archipelag­o’s outer islands.

For years, Western intelligen­ce agencies have worried over Huawei’s ties to the Chinese government and the possibilit­y that its equipment could be used for espionage. Australia, which is poised to ban Huawei from its domestic 5G mobile network on the advice of its intelligen­ce services, raised “concerns” that scuppered a Huawei offer for cabling to the Solomons, Houenipwel­a has previously told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp.

Huawei has said it was never informed of any security problems with its planned cables for the Solomons, where Chinese activity has attracted additional attention, as it is one of six countries in the Pacific to maintain ties with Taiwan.

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