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Huawei chairman urges US to reconsider ‘attack’ on global supply chain

- Reuters Shanghai

Chinese telecom giant Huawei Technologi­es said on Wednesday its supply chain was under attack from the US and called on Washington to reconsider its trade restrictio­ns which were hurting suppliers globally.

The world’s biggest maker of mobile telecommun­ications equipment and smartphone­s is under pressure from US trade curbs designed to choke Huawei’s access to commercial­ly available chips. “The US has modified their sanctions for the third time and that has indeed brought great challenges to our production and operations,” Huawei Chairman Guo Ping told reporters in Shanghai. Washington says Huawei is a vehicle for Chinese state espionage and from Sept. 15 imposed new curbs barring US companies from supplying or servicing the company. Huawei has repeatedly denied being a national security risk.

Guo said that although Huawei had sufficient chips for its business-to-business operations, including its 5G network enterprise, it was feeling the pinch of the US restrictio­ns on its smartphone chip stocks.

It understood that suppliers such as Qualcomm were applying for US licenses which would allow them to continue serving Huawei, he added.

Intel has already received licenses to supply certain products to Huawei, while China’s Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp, which ich uses US-origin machinery to produce chips for Huawei, has as applied for a license, Reuters euters has previously reported. rted. Huawei was s willing to use Qualcomm mm chips in its smartphone­s martphones should Qualcomm mm get a license to sidestep the restrictio­ns, Guo added. Qualcomm did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. “We hope the US government can reconsider its policy and if the US government allows it we are still willing to buy products from US companies,” Guo said on the sidelines of its annual Huawei Connect conference.

Huawei has said that from Sept. 15 it would stop manufactur­ing its most advanced chips under its Kirin line which power its high-end phones. Analysts expect its existing supply of Kirin chips will run out next year. Consumers have rushed to buy Huawei phones amid concerns its mobile division is about to fold. Vendors say that prices have spiked by as much as 500 yuan ($74) for some devices. Washington has shown

little

sign that it is willing to back down from its fight with Huawei, which comes at a time when relations between the US and China are at their worst in decades.

The United States said last month it would expand a program it called “Clean Network” to prevent various Chinese apps and telecoms companies from accessing sensitive informatio­n on American citizens and businesses. businesses

David Wang, a Huawei executive director, direc said that the company compan hoped that countries would introduce “rational standards” for 5G. 5G Huawei had yet to see any an adverse impact on its global 5G business from the US program, he said. sa

 ?? AFP ?? Huawei’s rotating chairman Guo Ping.
AFP Huawei’s rotating chairman Guo Ping.

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