The Timaru Herald

Huawei offers security deal

- Tom Pullar-Strecker

Chinese telecommun­ications equipment giant Huawei would be open to using only New Zealanders rather than Chinese workers to build 5G mobile networks here, if that helped assuage spying concerns, a local representa­tive says.

Huawei New Zealand deputy managing director Andrew Bowater offered the concession in the wake of the arrest of one of its employees in Poland on spying charges.

Polish authoritie­s announced on Friday that a Huawei director, Wang Weijing, and a Polish cybersecur­ity expert were accused of carrying out ‘‘espionage against Poland’’.

Huawei sacked its employee, acknowledg­ing ‘‘the incident’’ had brought the company into disrepute. Polish state TV reported both accused men had declared themselves innocent.

Bowater said he was aware of the situation in Poland, but it appeared the individual­s’ actions had no relation to the company.

It was too soon to say whether the accusation­s could affect its hopes of building 5G in New Zealand, he said.

New Zealand’s Government Communicat­ions Security Bureau (GCSB) blocked a proposal by Spark in November to use equipment from Huawei to build its 5G mobile network, which it hopes to have operationa­l by July next year.

However, the GCSB indicated the decision was the ‘‘start of process’’ which might not necessary amount to an outright ban.

Spark spokesman Andrew Pirie has previously confirmed its proposal would have seen Huawei staff install as well as supply 5G access equipment on its cellphone towers.

One of the GCSB’s concerns – though not its only one – is understood to be the ‘‘National Intelligen­ce Law’’ passed by China’s National People’s Congress June last year.

The law has been interprete­d by Western intelligen­ce agencies as requiring any Chinese citizen or company linked to China to engage in espionage or to collect intelligen­ce anywhere in the world if requested.

Bowater said the GCSB had still not spoken to Huawei directly about the reasons why Spark’s proposal was declined, which he said would be helpful.

But if the National Intelligen­ce Law was a concern, ‘‘even that could be mitigated’’ by a commitment to use only ‘‘100 per cent New Zealanders’’ for installs, he said. in

Other issues have emerged since the GCSB blocked Spark’s proposal.

On December 21, the GCSB joined American and British spy agencies in accusing the Chinese Ministry of State Security of being linked to a global campaign of cyber-enabled commercial intellectu­al property theft.

Any block on Huawei being involved in the rollout of 5G in New Zealand could disproport­ionately affect 2degrees, which has largely relied on the Chinese firm to supply the bulk of its network technology. 2degrees also says prices could rise if Ericsson and Nokia were the only alternativ­e vendors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand