The Asian Age

US blacklists Xiaomi, 8 Chinese firms

China’s oil firm found acting as a bully for PLA to intimidate its neighbours

- The Department National Corp.

Hong Kong, Jan. 15: The US government has blackliste­d Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi Corp. and China’s third-largest national oil company for alleged military links, heaping pressure on Beijing in President Donald Trump’s last week in office.

The Department of Defense added nine companies to its list of Chinese companies with military links, including Xiaomi and state-owned plane manufactur­er Commercial Aircraft Corp. of China (Comac). US investors will have to divest their stakes in Chinese companies on the military list by November this year, according to an executive order signed by Trump in November.

Xiaomi did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Xiaomi Corp. overtook Apple Inc. as the worlds No. 3 smartphone maker by sales in the third quarter of 2020, according to data by Gartner. Xiaomi’s market share has grown as Huawei’s sales have suffered after it was blackliste­d by the US and its smartphone­s were cut off from essential services from Google.

Separately, Commerce put China Offshore Oil (CNOOC) on the entity list, an economic blacklist that forbids US firms from exporting or transferri­ng technology with the companies named unless permission has been obtained from the US government.

The move comes after about 60 Chinese companies were added to the list in December, including drone maker DJI and semiconduc­tor firm SMIC. CNOOC has been involved in offshore drilling in the disputed waters South China Sea, where Beijing has overlappin­g territoria­l claims with other countries including Vietnam, the Philippine­s, Brunei, Taiwan, and Malaysia. “China’s reckless and belligeren­t actions in the South China Sea and its aggressive push to acquire sensitive intellectu­al property and technology for its militarisa­tion efforts are a threat to US national security and the security of the internatio­nal community,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a statement.

“CNOOC acts as a bully for the People’s Liberation Army to intimidate China’s neighbours, and the Chinese military continues to benefit from government civil-military fusion policies for malign purposes,” Ross said. — AP

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