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New Zealand rejects Huawei’s first 5G bid citing national security risk

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand’s intelligen­ce agency has rejected the telecom industry’s first request in the country to use 5G equipment provided by China’s Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd, citing concerns about national security.

Telecommun­ications services provider Spark New Zealand Ltd, which made the request, said yesterday it would review the reasoning before considerin­g any further steps.

The decision comes as Western nations become increasing­ly wary of what they say is possible Chinese government involvemen­t in fifth-generation mobile and other communicat­ions networks.

Huawei has repeatedly insisted Beijing has no influence over it.

Earlier this year, neighbouri­ng Australia banned Huawei from supplying 5G equipment, also citing security risks. Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported the US government was trying to persuade companies in allied countries to avoid Huawei.

“I have informed Spark that a significan­t network security risk was identified,” government communicat­ions security bureau director-general Andrew Hampton said separately yesterday.

Intelligen­ce Services Minister Andrew Little told Reuters that Spark – whose request was part of the country’s first 5G applicatio­n – could work with the agency to mitigate risk. He declined to specify the concerns, citing classified informatio­n.

Huawei said in a statement that it will “actively address any concerns and work together to find a way forward”, adding it has signed more than 20 5G contracts with carriers worldwide.

Speaking in Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang expressed “serious concern”, and said China-New Zealand business ties were mutually beneficial and win-win.

“We hope the New Zealand government provides a fair competitio­n environmen­t for Chinese companies operating in New Zealand, and does more to benefit bilateral mutual trust and cooperatio­n,” he told a daily news briefing.

Huawei has been involved in other telecommun­ications systems in New Zealand such as its 4G mobile network, and is investing NZ$400mil (US$271.88mil) into research and developmen­t.

Little said each decision regarding telecom technology was made separately under telecom and security legislatio­n.

“The difference between 5G networks and convention­al 4G and 3G networks is the configurat­ion of the technology,” Little said. ”With 5G technology, every component of the 5G network means every part of the network can be accessed.”

That echoed Australian concerns that, with 5G, it was difficult to confine vendors considered high risk to a network’s less sensitive parts.

Spark rival 2degrees said it had noted the decision and was “seeking clarity on it”.

Vodafone New Zealand Ltd declined to comment on the matter. — Reuters

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