Waterloo Region Record

China’s Huawei dealt new blow — by Poland

Exec at tech giant and a Polish security expert are charged with spying

- VANESSA GERA AND KELVIN CHAN

WARSAW, POLAND — Poland has arrested a director at the Chinese tech giant Huawei and one of its own former cybersecur­ity experts and charged them with spying for China, authoritie­s said Friday.

The developmen­t comes as the United States is exerting pressure on its allies not to use Huawei, the world’s biggest maker of telecommun­ications network equipment, over data security concerns.

The two men — one a Chinese citizen who was a former envoy in Poland before moving over to a senior position at Huawei and the other a Pole who held several top government cybersecur­ity positions — were arrested Tuesday, according to Poland’s Internal Security Agency.

Polish security agents searched the Warsaw offices of Huawei and Orange, Poland’s leading communicat­ions provider, where the former Polish security expert recently worked, seizing documents and electronic data.

The homes of both men, also in Warsaw, were also searched, according to agency spokespers­on Stanislaw Zaryn.

It’s the latest setback for Huawei in Europe, where the company has ambitious plans to roll out next-generation “5G” mobile networks, which it is a leader in developing.

The arrest is a fresh sign that a U.S. dispute with China over its ban on the company is spilling over to Europe, Huawei’s biggest foreign market.

Some European government­s and telecom companies are following the U.S. lead in questionin­g whether using Huawei for vital infrastruc­ture for mobile networks could leave them exposed to snooping by the Chinese government.

Maciej Wasik, deputy head of Poland’s Special Services agency, said the operation that resulted in the arrests of the two suspects had been underway for a long time. He said “both carried out espionage activities against Poland.”

Zaryn said prosecutor­s have charged the two men with espionage, but agents are continuing to collect evidence and interview witnesses. Further indictment­s are expected, he said.

He said no further details would be released about the case because it is classified and the investigat­ion is ongoing.

Polish state television TVP reported the men have proclaimed their innocence, but Zaryn said he could not confirm that. If convicted, they could each face up to 10 years in prison.

TVP identified the arrested Chinese man as Weijing W., saying he was a director in Poland at Huawei. It said he also went by the Polish first name of Stanislaw and had previously worked at the Chinese consulate in Gdansk.

A LinkedIn profile for a man named Stanislaw Wang appears to match details of the man described by Polish television.

Wang’s resumé said he worked at China’s General Consulate in Gdansk from 2006-2011 and at Huawei Enterprise Poland since 2011, where he was first director of public affairs and since 2017 the “sales director of public sector.”

State TV identified the Polish man as Piotr D., and said he was a high-ranking employee at the Internal Security Agency, where he served as deputy director in the department of informatio­n security, until 2011.

The Polish state news agency, PAP, said the man had also held top cybersecur­ity positions at the Interior Ministry and the Office of Electronic Communicat­ions, a regulatory body that oversees cyber and other telecommun­ications issues.

While at the Internal Security Agency, it said, he was involved in building a mobile communicat­ions system for top Polish officials, and he was fired in 2011 amid a major corruption scandal.

Geopolitic­al tensions over Huawei have intensifie­d since Canada arrested a top executive at Vancouver airport last month at the request of U.S. authoritie­s.

China subsequent­ly detained Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, two Canadians living in China, on allegation­s they were harming China’s national security. They were arrested separately and remain in custody.

The company has been blocked in the U.S. since 2012 over fears its equipment is a security risk, and last year Australia, New Zealand and Japan instituted their own bans against using Huawei.

The company and analysts have long maintained it has never been found guilty of a cybersecur­ity breach.

“One thing is clear: this is another nail in the coffin of Huawei’s European ambitions,” said Thorsten Benner, director of the Global Public Policy Institute, a thinktank.

Huawei’s chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, was arrested Dec. 1 in Canada in connection with U.S. accusation­s that the company violated restrictio­ns on sales of American technology to Iran.

The United States wants Meng extradited to face charges. She is out on bail in Canada.

 ?? CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Huawei logo displayed at the main office of Chinese tech giant Huawei in Warsaw, Poland, on Friday.
CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Huawei logo displayed at the main office of Chinese tech giant Huawei in Warsaw, Poland, on Friday.

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