Otago Daily Times

No plans for Huawei 5G ban

- RACHEL THOMAS

WELLINGTON: New Zealand will not ban Huawei equipment despite a move in the UK to purge the Chinese company’s gear from its 5G networks.

The ruling follows sanctions imposed by the United States, which claim the firm poses a national security threat — something Huawei denies.

Now the UK Parliament has heard that by 2027, it will be illegal to use 5G infrastruc­ture components from Huawei.

One commentato­r said the UK’s decision was about more than just the company.

Global security analyst Paul Buchanan believed it could be more to do with the wider diplomatic stoush over China’s handling of Covid19 and Hong Kong’s democracy protests.

He said New Zealand should be reconsider­ing its relationsh­ip, too.

‘‘There are serious suspicions that they’re just not honest brokers, that they use their inclusion in world trade regimes to advantage themselves at the expense of others, and they simply don’t play by the same rules as everybody else.

‘‘So I think that New Zealand, because of its vulnerabil­ities, needs to reconsider its trade relationsh­ip with China because that will not go back to what it was before February.’’

Minister Responsibl­e for the GCSB Andrew Little said in a statement yesterday the Government would not rule out using future tech from Chinese telco Huawei.

‘‘New Zealand does not ban any telecommun­ications vendor,’’ he said.

‘‘We do, however, have a wellestabl­ished and independen­t regulatory process to ensure the security of our networks under the Telecommun­ications (Intercepti­on Capability and Security) Act 2013 (TICSA).’’

‘‘TICSA has been in place since 2014, and works well.

‘‘We are confident that New Zealand’s telecommun­ications networks are secure and that our regulatory model serves New Zealanders well.’’

He said every decision was made on a casebycase basis, and in accordance with New Zealand laws.

Technology commentato­r Bill Bennett said Huawei had not yet shown it could meet those standards.

‘‘Huawei didn’t pass the test the first time around and everyone goes out of your way to tell you that’s not a ban, that in effect bans it from the network until it passes that test, so we’re already in the ‘not going to be buying Huawei’ camp.’’

However, he said that could all change if government­s changed — both in New Zealand and overseas.

Currently, no telco providers are using Huawei technology as part of their 5G networks in New Zealand.

Vodafone and Spark both work with Nokia.

But Spark and 2degrees have refused to say whether they would rule out partnering with Huawei for 5G networks in the future.

Huawei New Zealand deputy managing director Andrew Bowater said the company had been in the New Zealand market for 15 years, and remained committed to its customers.

‘‘5G technology is a great opportunit­y for New Zealand, however it is not the top priority as we come out of Covid19 and we understand this and have no intention of making this an issue right now.’’

He said Huawei wanted to help the economic recovery by ensuring its networks worked well. — RNZ

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Andrew Little

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