Oman Daily Observer

Japan govt to halt buying China firms Huawei, ZTE equipment

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TOKYO: Japan plans to ban government purchases of equipment from China’s Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd and ZTE Corp to beef up its defences against intelligen­ce leaks and cyber attacks, sources said.

Chinese tech companies are under intense scrutiny from Washington and some prominent allies over ties to the Chinese government, driven by concerns they could be used by Beijing for spying.

A government ban in Japan will come after Huawei has already been locked out of the US market and after Australia and New Zealand have blocked it from building 5G networks. Huawei has repeatedly insisted Beijing has no influence over it.

The Yomiuri newspaper, which first reported the news of Japan’s planned ban earlier on Friday, said the government was expected to revise its internal rules on procuremen­t as early as Monday.

The government does not plan to specifical­ly name Huawei and ZTE in the revision, but will put in place measures aimed at strengthen­ing security that apply to the companies, a person with direct knowledge and a person briefed on the matter said.

Japan’s chief government spokesman, Yoshihide Suga, declined to comment. But he noted that the country has been in close communicat­ion with the United States on a wide range of areas, including cybersecur­ity.

“Cybersecur­ity is becoming an important issue in Japan,” he told a regular news conference. “We’ll take firm measures looking at it from a variety of perspectiv­es.”

ZTE declined to comment. Huawei did not immediatel­y comment.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang expressed “serious concern” about the reports.

The essence of China-japan business and economic cooperatio­n is mutual benefit and win, and both companies have legally operated in Japan for a long time, he told a daily news briefing in Beijing.

“We hope the Japanese side can provide a fair competitio­n environmen­t for Chinese companies operating in Japan and not do anything to harm bilateral cooperatio­n and mutual trust.”

Huawei supplies some network equipment to private Japanese telcos NTT Docomo and KDDI Corp.

And Softbank Group Corp has a long relationsh­ip with Huawei — which in 2011 became the first Chinese firm to join Japan’s conservati­ve Keidanren business lobby — and has partnered with it on 5G trials.

“The government will not buy where there are security concerns but it is difficult to restrict procuremen­t by private companies,” one of the sources said.

Docomo and Softbank did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

“While closely observing changes we will consider appropriat­e steps,” a KDDI spokeswoma­n said.

Some private companies elsewhere, though, have distanced themselves from the Chinese firms.

In the United States, Softbank’s wireless subsidiary Sprint Corp said it no longer sources equipment from Huawei or ZTE. Softbank is trying to complete the unit’s sale to T-mobile US Inc.

And Britain’s BT Group said on Wednesday it was removing Huawei’s equipment from the core of its existing 3G and 4G mobile operations and would not use the company in central parts of the next network.

ZTE’S Shenzhen-listed shares rose 0.5 per cent on Friday after sliding 5.7 per cent the previous day amid a global stocks sell-off sparked by the arrest in Canada of Huawei’s top executive at the behest of the United States. Huawei is unlisted.

Chinese tech companies are under intense scrutiny from Washington and some prominent allies over ties to the Chinese government, driven by concerns they could be used by Beijing for spying

 ?? — Reuters ?? A delivery man uses a phone near a building of China’s ZTE Corp in Beijing, China.
— Reuters A delivery man uses a phone near a building of China’s ZTE Corp in Beijing, China.

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