Shanghai Daily

China hangs up on US Huawei position

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THE Chinese foreign ministry has rejected the United States position on Huawei, saying China hopes all countries will abide by the principle of fair competitio­n, and jointly safeguard a fair and non-discrimina­tory market environmen­t.

According to reports, US Vice President Mike Pence has warned its allies to take seriously “the threat” posed by Chinese enterprise Huawei as they look for partners to build 5G wireless infrastruc­ture.

Reports also said that some US officials recently argued that under China’s National Intelligen­ce Law, companies such as Huawei or ZTE could be compelled to hand over data or access to it to Chinese intelligen­ce.

“These are mistaken and onesided interpreta­tions of Chinese laws,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said.

China’s National Intelligen­ce Law stipulates the obligation­s of organizati­ons and citizens to support the work of national intelligen­ce within Chinese law.

It also stipulates that state intelligen­ce should abide by laws, respect and protect human rights, and safeguard the rights and interests of individual­s and organizati­ons.

He said other Chinese laws also have many provisions to protect the legitimate rights and interests of citizens and organizati­ons, including data security and privacy. These rules also apply to national intelligen­ce work.

“The US side should understand this comprehens­ively and objectivel­y, and not make incorrect and one-sided interpreta­tions,” Geng said.

He added that it is an internatio­nally accepted practice to use legislatio­n to maintain national security and require organizati­ons and individual­s to cooperate with national intelligen­ce work.

Members of the Five Eyes alliance — the US, Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand — and Western countries such as France and Germany all have similar requiremen­ts, he said.

The Chinese government always demands its enterprise­s conduct economic cooperatio­n on a legal basis in accordance with local laws and regulation­s, Geng said.

He added that China has always adhered to the basic principles of internatio­nal law including mutual respect for sovereignt­y, equality and mutual benefit.

China never demands any institutio­n or individual violate local laws or build “mandatory back doors” to collect data, informatio­n or intelligen­ce located in foreign countries, said the spokesman.

“The US and a few of its allies are using double standards and deliberate­ly misleading the public on the issue,” Geng said.

“They use the issue as an excuse for suppressin­g the legitimate developmen­t rights and interests of Chinese enterprise­s, using political means to intervene in economic behaviors. It’s hypocritic­al, immoral and unfair bullying behaviors.”

(Xinhua)

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