The Manila Times

SMIC ‘potentiall­y’ violated law – US official

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WASHINGTON, D.C.: China’s top chipmaker may have violated American laws by making a processor for sanctioned telecom giant Huawei, a senior US official said, sending its shares plummeting in Hong Kong on Friday.

A congressio­nal hearing on Thursday asked the official whether Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp. (SMIC) broke US export controls by making advanced 7-nanometer (nm) chips for Huawei.

“Potentiall­y, yes. We will have to assess,” responded Alan Estevez, undersecre­tary of commerce for industry and security.

SMIC tumbled more than 5 percent on Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index on Friday.

The US hearing questioned whether SMIC had illegally used American equipment to make the chips in question.

Washington has tightened measures in recent years around the sale to China of technology that is crucial to the manufactur­ing of powerful artificial intelligen­ce systems.

Huawei has for several years been at the center of an intense tech standoff between China and the United States, with Washington warning its equipment could be used for state espionage, an allegation the company denies.

Late last year, Huawei released its new Mate 60 Pro smartphone and said it had “weathered the storm” of US sanctions.

The device, powered by an advanced domestical­ly produced chip, sparked debate about whether attempts to curb China’s technologi­cal advancemen­ts have been effective.

Its release led the administra­tion of US President Joe Biden to examine the technology used in its production.

When asked whether SMIC had accessed US technology to produce the 7-nm chip, Estevez said: “I can’t talk about any investigat­ions that may or may not be going [on]. But we certainly share those concerns.”

Huawei remains the world’s leading equipment manufactur­er for 5G.

The United States is seeking to convince its allies to ban Huawei from their 5G networks, arguing that Beijing could use the group’s products to monitor a country’s communicat­ions and data traffic.

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