US to counter Chinese internet bid in Papua New Guinea — Diplomat
SYDNEY: The United States is working on a counter- offer to stop Chinese telecom giant Huawei Technologies Co Ltd from building internet infrastructure in Papua New Guinea, its top diplomat to Australia said yesterday.
The bid comes two years after Huawei first agreed to build a network there, and as the United States and its allies mount a vigorous campaign to check China’s rising influence in the region by deepening their own diplomatic ties and boosting aid.
It also follows Australia shutting Huawei out of contracts to build a national mobile network on security grounds, and blocking it from laying a subsea communications cable from Sydney to PNG and the Solomon Islands.
“We are working on a counteroffer,” US Charge d’Affaires James Caruso said on Australian Broadcasting Corp radio, when asked about reports that Australia, Japan and the US were looking to trump Huawei’s PNG project.
“The whole idea is to give alternatives. This is not to say: ‘ Don’t do business with China.’ China’s offers are out on the table; it’s up to us to be competitive,” he said, without elaborating on the offer’s details.
Representatives of Australia, Japan and Papua New Guinea had no immediate response when contacted by Reuters.
Huawei, which denies its equipment is a security threat, had no immediate comment.
The United States has not had an ambassador in Australia since 2016, with Caruso filling in as top diplomat.
The battle for influence in the sparsely populated Pacific, where China has emerged as the secondlargest donor, matters because each island state has a vote at forums like the United Nations, and controls swathes of resourcerich ocean. — Reuters