The Borneo Post

China says cyber rules no cause for foreign business concern

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BEIJING: China’s pending cyber security law will not create obstacles for foreign business, China’s Foreign Ministry said, responding to concerns by internatio­nal business lobbies over the planned rules.

More than 40 global business groups last week petitioned Premier Li Keqiang, according to a copy of a letter seen by Reuters, urging China to revise draft cyber rules they believe are vague and discrimina­te against foreign enterprise­s.

The groups say the pending rules, including a cyber security law that could be passed this year, include provisions for invasive government security reviews and onerous requiremen­ts to keep data in China.

They say the regulation­s would impede China’s economic growth, create barriers to market entry and impair the country’s security by isolating it technologi­cally.

The ministry, in a faxed statement to Reuters late on Tuesday night, said the law will not be used to “carry out differenti­al treatment and will not create obstacles and barriers for internatio­nal trade and foreign businesses investing in China.”

It said companies would be able to transfer data required for business purposes outside China’s borders after passing a security evaluation.

“These evaluation­s are for supervisin­g and guaranteei­ng that the security of this data accords with China’s security standards,” the ministry said.

“As for the legal requiremen­t for internet operators to provide relevant data in the course of enforcemen­t agencies’ counter-terrorism and criminal investigat­ions, this is necessary for safeguardi­ng national security and investigat­ing crimes. All countries do this,” the ministry said.

“The concerns of foreign investors and businesses invested in China are unnecessar­y,” it said.

Some foreign businesses in China are becoming increasing­ly pessimisti­c, in part due to rules companies think could make it harder to operate there.

The cyber rules have added to tensions between China and its trade partners, who have been concerned about Beijing’s Made in China 2025 plan.

The proposal calls for a progressiv­e increase in domestic components in sectors such as advanced informatio­n technology and robotics.

Business lobbies also say requiremen­ts to hand over sensitive data or source code to the government could put business secrets at risk and boost the capabiliti­es of domestic competitor­s.

How much technology firms should cooperate with government­s has been a contentiou­s issue in many countries, not just in China.

Apple Inc was asked by Chinese authoritie­s within the past two years to hand over its source code but refused, the company’s top lawyer said this year, even as US law enforcemen­t tried to get the company to unlock encrypted data from an iPhone linked to a mass shooting. — Reuters

These evaluation­s are for supervisin­g and guaranteei­ng that the security of this data accords with China’s security standards. China’s Foreign Ministry

 ??  ?? Power lines run from Liddell Power Station near Muswellbro­ok, 170 km (106 miles) north of Sydney, Australia November. Australia’s decision to block the A$10 billion (US$7.7 billion)sale of the country’s biggest energy grid to Chinese bidders was a...
Power lines run from Liddell Power Station near Muswellbro­ok, 170 km (106 miles) north of Sydney, Australia November. Australia’s decision to block the A$10 billion (US$7.7 billion)sale of the country’s biggest energy grid to Chinese bidders was a...

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