The Borneo Post

China’s Huawei fights US spying allegation­s on crucial European front

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SHANGHAI/ HONG KONG: Even before the arrest of its CFO last week, pressure from the US had forced China’s Huawei onto the back foot in markets from London to Tokyo.

But the detention of Meng Wanzhou in Canada over US allegation­s she misled banks about Huawei’s control of a fi rm operating in Iran could encourage more customers to stay away.

“The US messaging is undoubtedl­y having an influence (in Europe)... if not directly then definitely because it has helped create a hostile environmen­t,” a Huawei executive told Reuters, adding that many in Huawei were ‘shell- shocked’ by the arrest of the daughter and heir apparent of founder Ren Zhengfei.

Huawei and its lawyers have said it operates in strict compliance with applicable laws, and is confident that both the Canadian and US legal systems ‘will reach a just conclusion’.

Washington’s long campaign to convince the world that Huawei’s ties to Beijing make the network equipment it sells to telecoms fi rms a security risk has already taken its toll.

Meng’s arrest has raised concerns that European countries in particular could follow the US, Australia and New Zealand in restrictin­g Huawei’s access to those markets.

Huawei, which has repeatedly denied accusation­s it facilitate­s Chinese espionage operations, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Of Huawei’s 22 commercial contracts for next- generation 5G telecom networks, 14 are

The US messaging is undoubtedl­y having an influence (in Europe)...if not directly then definitely because it has helped create a hostile environmen­t.

in Europe, where nearly every major carrier on the continent is a customer.

In Britain alone, Huawei says it has spent £ 1.3 billion pounds ( USUS$1.65 billion) on investment and procuremen­t over the last five years.

Europe, Middle East and Africa was Huawei’s biggest region for sales outside China last year, its annual report says, accounting for 164 billion yuan, or 27 per cent, of total sales.

Huawei says it employs more than 11,000 people in Europe, including 1,900 in research and developmen­t, and spends ‘billions of euros per year’ in procuremen­t from the region.

Until recently its position in Europe seemed secure, with government­s resisting US pressure to block Huawei.

But there have been signs of a mood change, with some German government officials arguing that Huawei should be banned, Reuters reported last month.

In Britain, a critical government agency report prompted Huawei to announce that it would spend US$ 2 billion on a security overhaul.

Meanwhile, Japan’s top telecom operators, including Softbank Group, are re- evaluating possible use of Huawei equipment for upcoming 5G networks, Kyodo News reported.

Huawei is already trying to assuage European fears, including the spending proposal to Britain’s National Cyber Security Council, the company executive said.

It has also opened a laboratory to enable source code reviews in Germany and has plans to open another in at least one other European country.

And on Monday, Huawei assured the Danish government’s Defence Committee that its equipment was safe amid scrutiny of its role as a supplier to the nation’s largest telecom carrier.

Risks for customers, as well as for Huawei, are heightened by the possibilit­y that the sanctions investigat­ion in the US could lead to a ban on the purchase of US components. Such a ban nearly put ZTE Corp out of business before it was lifted.

At a summit for its vendor partners in early November, Huawei published a list of 92 ‘core suppliers’. Of these, 33 were from the US and include household names like Intel, Qualcomm, and Oracle, as well as lesser-known industry players like Seagate, Marvell, and Wind River.

Although Huawei has its own semiconduc­tor division, making it somewhat less vulnerable than ZTE, even that operation depends on US design software. — Reuters

A Huawei executive

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