The Sun (Malaysia)

China unlikely to approve deal on TikTok’s future in US

Oracle and Walmart’s agreement with ByteDance is ‘unfair’ and caters to uncreasona­ble demands by Washington, says Beijing-backed newspaper

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SHANGHAI: Beijing is unlikely to approve an “unfair” deal Oracle Corp and Walmart Inc said they have struck with ByteDance over the future of video-streaming app TikTok, state-backed newspaper Global Times said in an editorial.

The US majors have said they will buy into a new mainly US-owned company, TikTok Global, with a board of directors comprised mainly of Americans, as the parties work to pacify the administra­tion of US President Donald Trump which had planned to ban TikTok in the United States on security grounds.

In contrast, ByteDance has said TikTok Global will be its US subsidiary with 80% ownership.

“It is clear that these articles (terms) extensivel­y show

Washington’s bullying style and hooligan logic. They hurt China’s national security, interests and dignity,“said the English version of the editorial published late on Monday and which was also carried in the newspaper’s Chinese edition.

“From the informatio­n provided by the US, the deal was unfair. It caters to the unreasonab­le demands of Washington. It’s hard for us to believe that Beijing will approve such an agreement,“the editorial read, echoing tweets the same evening by the newspaper’s editorin-chief Hu Xijin.

The Global Times is a tabloid published by the People’s Daily, the official newspaper of China’s ruling Communist Party, but does not speak on behalf of the party and the government publicatio­n.

China’s government has largely refrained from directly commenting on the deal’s details, though its foreign ministry has repeatedly said the United States should offer a fair and non-discrimina­tory environmen­t for foreign companies.

The deal requires approval from regulators in both Beijing and Washington, ByteDance has said. China’s Ministry of Commerce in late August revised a tech export control list that experts said would give it regulatory oversight over any TikTok deal.

ByteDance and the commerce ministry did not immediatel­y respond to Reuters’ requests for comment yesterday. – Reuters

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