The Borneo Post

Poland could limit use of Huawei products after worker arrested

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WARSAW: Poland could consider banning the use of Huawei products by public bodies, a senior government official said, following the arrest of a Chinese Huawei official in the east European country last week.

The Polish government could also look to tighten legislatio­n to allow the authoritie­s to limit the availabili­ty of products made by any company deemed to pose a threat to security.

Poland arrested a Chinese employee of Huawei and a former Polish security official on spying allegation­s, officials and sources told Reuters on Friday, a move that could fuel Western security concerns about the telecoms equipment maker.

A government official who is responsibl­e for cyber security told Reuters “abrupt” policy changes towards Huawei were not warranted after the arrests.

But he said the use of the company’s products by state entities could be reviewed.

“We will analyse whether ... our decision can include an end to the use ... of Huawei products,” Karol Okonski told Reuters.

“We do not have the legal means to force private companies or citizens to stop using any IT company’s products.

It cannot be ruled out that we will consider legislativ­e changes that would allow such a move,” he added.

A spokesman for Poland’s security services said on Friday the Polish official arrested by the country’s Internal Security Agency (ISA) had been responsibl­e for issuing security certificat­es for equipment used by public administra­tion.

“(He) used to work for a number of public institutio­ns, held important managerial positions and was also connected with ... institutio­ns that protect internal security,” he told public broadcaste­r TVP.

Seeking to distance itself from the incident, Huawei said on Saturday it had sacked its employee, adding his “alleged actions have no relation to the company.”

Huawei, the world’s biggest producer of telecommun­ications equipment, faces intense scrutiny in the West over its relationsh­ip with China’s government and US-led allegation­s that its devices could be used by Beijing for spying.

No evidence has been produced publicly and the firm has repeatedly denied the accusation­s, but several Western countries have restricted Huawei’s access to their markets. — Reuters

 ??  ?? An attendee plays the Huawei VR2 virtual reality music game on the last day of CES 2019 at the Las Vegas Convention Centre in Las Vegas, Nevada. — AFP photo
An attendee plays the Huawei VR2 virtual reality music game on the last day of CES 2019 at the Las Vegas Convention Centre in Las Vegas, Nevada. — AFP photo

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