Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cabinet backs bill for 5G security

‘Guarantee’ mandated; no ban on Huawei gear

- By Frank Jordans

BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Cabinet approved a bill Wednesday that would require companies involved in setting up critical infrastruc­ture such as highspeed 5G networks to guarantee that their equipment can’t be used for sabotage, espionage or terrorism.

The bill, which goes to parliament, seeks to address concerns that vendors such as Chinese tech company Huawei might pose a security risk if they have access to core parts of the German telecoms network.

Companies will be required to submit a “guarantee” that contains details on how they ensure that components of critical systems can’t be misused for illegal purposes.

A vendor that fails to meet the threshold for trustworth­iness can be banned from operating equipment.

The measure doesn’t amount to an outright ban on Huawei in Germany, as demanded by the United States.

A German government spokesman declined to comment directly when asked about the Trump administra­tion’s threat to cut off intelligen­ce sharing with countries that use Huawei gear.

“This law concerns fundamenta­l questions of IT security and not individual manufactur­ers,” Steffen Seibert told reporters in Berlin.

Huawei denies U.S. allegation­s of facilitati­ng spying by China, a major trading partner of Germany.

In a statement, the company welcomed the draft law.

“For the 5G rollout, we believe this means that there will be higher and uniform security standards for all technology vendors,” it said, adding that the law would allow all vendors to compete fairly if they meet the security requiremen­ts.

“This fact- and standards-based approach is exemplary in addressing global cybersecur­ity challenges,” the company said. “Huawei will continue to work transparen­tly with regulators, customers, and industry organizati­ons to ensure the security of mobile networks.”

 ?? Markus Schreiber The Associated Press ?? Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Cabinet approved a bill Wednesday that would require companies to guarantee their equipment can’t be used for espionage or sabotage.
Markus Schreiber The Associated Press Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Cabinet approved a bill Wednesday that would require companies to guarantee their equipment can’t be used for espionage or sabotage.

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