Arab Times

Huawei exec arrested on US request, clouding China trade truce

Top executive faces extraditio­n to United States

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VANCOUVER/BEIJING, Dec 6, (RTRS): The daughter of Huawei’s founder, a top executive at the Chinese technology giant, was arrested in Canada and faces extraditio­n to the United States, roiling global stock markets as it threatened to inflame Sino-US trade tensions afresh.

The shock arrest of Meng Wanzhou, 46, who is Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd’s chief financial officer, raises fresh doubts over a 90-day truce on trade struck between Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping on Saturday – the day she was detained.

Her arrest, revealed late on Wednesday by Canadian authoritie­s, is related to US sanctions, a person familiar with the matter said. Reuters was unable to determine the precise nature of the possible violations.

Sources told Reuters in April that US authoritie­s have been investigat­ing Huawei, the world’s largest telecoms equipment maker, since at least 2016 for allegedly shipping US-origin products to Iran and other countries in violation of US export and sanctions laws.

The arrest and any potential sanctions on the world’s second biggest smartphone maker could have major repercussi­ons on the global technology supply chain.

US stock futures and Asian shares tumbled as news of the arrest heightened the sense a major collision was brewing between the world’s two largest economic powers, not just over tariffs but also over technologi­cal hegemony.

Huawei is not listed, but China’s second-largest telecom equipment maker, ZTE Corp, sank nearly 6 percent in Hong Kong while most of the nearby national bourses lost at least 2 percent.

MSCI’s benchmark for global stocks declined 0.61 percent, and US markets were on track to open lower by 1 percent or more. Investors stampeded for the safety of government debt, pushing the yield on the US 10-year Treasury note back below 2.9 percent to its lowest level in three months.

Huawei is already under intense scrutiny from US and other western government­s about its ties to the Chinese government, driven by concerns it could be used by the state for spying. It has been locked out of the United States and some other markets for telecom gear. Huawei has repeatedly insisted Beijing has no influence over it.

Meng, one of the vice chairs on the company’s board and the daughter of company founder Ren Zhengfei, was arrested on Dec. 1 at the request of US authoritie­s and a court hearing has been set for Friday, a Canadian Justice Department spokesman said. Trump and Xi had dined in Argentina on Dec 1 at the G20 summit.

Huawei, which generated $93 billion in revenue last year, confirmed the arrest in a statement. “The company has been provided very little informatio­n regarding the charges and is not aware of any wrongdoing by Ms Meng,” it said.

She was detained when she was transferri­ng flights in Canada, it added.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told a daily briefing on Thursday that China had asked Canada and the United States for an explanatio­n of Meng’s arrest, but they have “not provided any clarificat­ion”.

The Chinese consulate in Vancouver has been providing her assistance, he added, declining further comment. On Wednesday, China’s embassy in Canada said it resolutely opposed the arrest and called for her immediate release.

In April, the sources told Reuters the US Justice Department probe was being handled by the US attorney’s office in Brooklyn.

The US Justice Department on Wednesday declined to comment. A spokesman for the US attorney’s office in Brooklyn also declined to comment.

Lu Xiang, an expert on China-US relations at the state-backed Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the arrest of Meng is “extremely shocking”.

“If someone from the United States is hoping to use threats to an individual’s personal safety in order to add weight in the talks, then they have most certainly miscalcula­ted,” he said.

“I believe that China’s government will use maximum force to fight for freedom and justice for Meng Wanzhou.”

Arthur Kroeber, founder of Gavekal Dragonomic­s, said it was unlikely that Beijing would retaliate against the local U.S. business community, whose interests have partly overlapped with China’s in the trade war and been a source of leverage for Beijing.

“You can play hardball with a small country but you can’t do it with the US,” he said. “Actually it hurts them to make life difficult” for US companies.

A user of China’s Twitter-like Weibo platform said Chinese should boycott products made by US tech giant Apple Inc and instead buy Huawei products to show support for one of China’s national champions.

However, the topic ranked only 31st among trending items on Weibo as of Thursday afternoon, with many discussion threads apparently blocked, which is not unusual on China’s heavily censored Internet.

Jia Wenshan, a professor at Chapman University in California, said the arrest “runs a huge risk of derailing the US-China trade talks”.

While Meng’s arrest comes at a delicate time in US-China relations, it was not clear if the timing was coincident­al.

The probe of Huawei is similar to one that threatened the survival of China’s ZTE Corp , which pleaded guilty in 2017 to violating US laws that restrict the sale of American-made technology to Iran.

Earlier this year, the United States banned American firms from selling parts and software to ZTE, which then paid $1 billion this summer as part of a deal to get the ban lifted.

Huawei has said it complies with all applicable export control and sanctions laws and US and other regulation­s. A profile of Huawei’s chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou is displayed on a Huawei computer at a Huawei store in Beijing, China on Dec 6. Canadian authoritie­s said Wednesday that they have arrested Meng for

possible extraditio­n to the United States. (AP)

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