Stabroek News

US warns Jamaica against Chinese 5G

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(Jamaica Observer) The United States has fired a shot across the bow of the Jamaican Government in relation to the installati­on of fifth generation ( 5G) mobile technology infrastruc­ture, saying that any decision to engage China or a Chinese firm poses several risks to the island, particular­ly to the financial sector.

America’s top diplomat in Jamaica, Ambassador Donald Tapia, made Washington’s position known in an exclusive interview with the Sunday Observer last Friday following an article published by the newspaper last Sunday reporting Spectrum Management Authority (SMA) saying that Jamaica is far advanced in preparing the regulatory and monitoring regime for the proliferat­ion of 5G services in the island.

While advancing his preference that Jamaica goes with other models of 5G architectu­re, Tapia made the point that the island’s financial sector would be hit hard if the Government engages 5G technology from a Chinese source.

Making it clear that his problem with China rests with the totalitari­an nature of its Government, Tapia said his country has national security concerns with 5G technology developed by Chinese companies such as Huawei and ZTE.

Declaring that these companies have been found wanting on data security issues, Ambassador Tapia produced US State Department informatio­n outlining myths and facts about 5G security and

Huawei.

Included in the informatio­n is a declaratio­n that no American company currently offers 5G end-to-end network solutions. “Security concerns expressed by the United States are truly about ensuring our shared security,” the State Department states.

It adds that alternativ­e suppliers of endto- end solutions are headquarte­red in democracie­s that offer rule of law and judicial protection­s to prevent government overreach. The document lists those suppliers as Ericsson in Sweden, Nokia in Finland, and Samsung in South Korea.

The State Department also argues in the document that “allowing Chinese equipment companies into any part of a 5G network creates unacceptab­le risks to national security, critical infrastruc­ture, privacy, and human rights”.

Tapia reiterated his Government’s position that it will reassess how it interconne­cts and shares informatio­n with countries that compromise their 5G security.

“As for consequenc­es, it’s gonna affect banking, any financial transactio­n from this island,” Tapia said, adding “that’s the biggest consequenc­e you have, that your financial institutio­ns and the finance of Jamaica stops... that’s the consequenc­e that you are looking at long term. That’s major.” Another negative consequenc­e of utilising Chinese-developed 5G, he said, was access to aid in times of disaster.

“If you were to have a hurricane, earth

quake or any type of natural disaster, we cannot and will not move into a communist Chinese network because it gives them the opportunit­y to download all the data that we have,” he explained.

Two-headed dragon

“You either have to look to the East to the two-headed dragon, or you’re gonna have to look to the North. It’s a decision your Government will have to make,” Tapia contended.

He pointed to the United Kingdom Government’s decision earlier this year banning mobile providers in that country from buying new Huawei 5G equipment after December this year. The Boris

Johnson Administra­tion also ordered the companies to remove all Huawei 5G kits from their networks by 2027.

London’s decision came after Washington imposed sanctions on the Chinese firm, which the Americans say poses a national security threat. Huawei has denied the accusation.

On Friday, Ambassador Tapia, who has consistent­ly expressed discomfort with Jamaica’s business relationsh­ip with China, said the issue of trust was extremely important in the establishm­ent of a 5G network.

His comments echoed those by the State Department which, in its document, stated that “trust cannot exist when vendors are subject to secret manipulati­on by an authoritar­ian Government, like the People’s Republic of China, that lacks an independen­t judiciary and rule of law that prevents misuse of data”.

The 5th generation mobile network is designed to connect virtually everyone and everything together including machines, objects, and devices. It is designed to deliver higher multi-Gbps peak data speeds, ultra-low latency, more reliabilit­y, massive network capacity, increased availabili­ty, and a more uniform experience to more users.

In its 2019/2020 annual report tabled in Parliament two weeks ago, the SMA outlined a number of initiative­s and activities being put in place to prepare Jamaica for the roll-out of 5G services.

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Donald Tapia

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