Business World

Canada arrests Huawei CFO on US request

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OTTAWA/VANCOUVER/SAN FRANCISCO — Huawei Technologi­es Co.’s chief financial officer (CFO) was arrested in Canada over potential violations of US sanctions on Iran, provoking outrage from China and complicati­ng thorny trade negotiatio­ns just as they enter a critical juncture.

Wanzhou Meng — also deputy chairwoman and the daughter of Huawei’s founder — faces extraditio­n to the United States, said Ian McLeod, a Canada Justice department spokesman.

She was arrested Dec. 1 after the US Department of Justice in April opened an investigat­ion into whether the telecommun­ications giant sold gear to Iran despite sanctions on exports to the region.

News of Ms. Meng’s arrest provoked an immediate protest from the Chinese embassy in Canada, demanding the US and its neighbor “rectify wrongdoing­s” and free Ms. Meng.

Her arrest is likely to heighten tensions between Washington and Beijing days after the world’s two largest economies agreed on a truce in their growing trade conflict.

Ms. Meng’s father Ren Zhengfei, a former army engineer who’s regularly named among China’s top business executives, has won acclaim at home for turning an electronic­s reseller into the world’s second-largest smartphone maker and a major producer of networking gear.

The CFO’s arrest could be regarded back home as an attack on China’s foremost corporate champions. While Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd. dominate headlines thanks to flashy growth and highprofil­e billionair­e founders, Ren’s company is by far China’s most global technology company, with operations spanning Africa, Europe and Asia.

Its ambitions range from artificial intelligen­ce and chipmaking to fifth-generation wireless. Its massive push into future mobile communicat­ions has raised hackles in the United States and become a focal point for American attempts to contain China’s ascendance. Shares in several of its suppliers, including Largan Precision Co. and MediaTek, Inc., fell. US equity futures slid, which many traders attributed to news of Ms. Meng’s arrest.

“Tencent and Alibaba may be domestic champions and huge platforms in of their own rights, but Huawei has become a global powerhouse,” said Neil Campling, an analyst at Mirabaud Securities Ltd.

It is “5G standards that are at the heart of the wider IP debate and why the US and her allies are now doing everything they can to cut to the heart of the Chinese technology IP revolution.”

The arrest was reported earlier by Canada’s The Globe and Mail newspaper. The US Justice department declined to comment about the arrest. A spokeswoma­n for Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau referred questions to the country’s Justice department.

Senator Chris Van Hollen, a Maryland Democrat, said Wednesday night that Huawei and ZTE “are two sides of the same coin — Chinese telecommun­ications companies that represent a fundamenta­l risk to American national security.”

“While the Commerce department focused its attention on ZTE, this news highlights that Huawei is also violating US Law,” Van Hollen said in a statement.

Huawei, in a statement, said the arrest was made on behalf of the United States so Ms. Meng could be extradited to “face unspecifie­d charges” in the Eastern District of New York.

“The company has been provided very little informatio­n regarding the charges and is not aware of any wrongdoing by Ms. Meng,” Huawei said.

“The company believes the Canadian and US legal systems will ultimately reach a just conclusion. Huawei complies with all applicable laws and regulation­s where it operates, including applicable export control and sanction laws and regulation­s of the UN, US and EU.”

US authoritie­s in 2016 began voicing concerns that Huawei and others could install back doors in their equipment that would let them monitor users in the US. Huawei has denied those allegation­s.

The Pentagon stopped offering Huawei’s devices on US military bases citing security concerns. Best Buy Co., one of the largest electronic­s retailers in the US, also recently stopped selling Huawei products.

In August, US President Donald Trump signed a bill banning the government’s use of Huawei technology based on the security concerns.

Also in August, Australia banned the use of Huawei’s equipment for new faster 5G, or fifthgener­ation, wireless networks in the country and New Zealand last week did the same, citing national security concerns. Similar moves are under considerat­ion in the United Kingdom.

The United States, which believes Huawei’s equipment can be used for spying, is contacting key allies including Germany, Italy and Japan, to get them to persuade companies in their countries to avoid using equipment from Huawei, the Wall Street Journal reported last week.

In 2016, the Commerce department sought informatio­n regarding whether Huawei was possibly sending US technology to Syria and North Korea as well as Iran. The US previously banned ZTE Corp., a Huawei competitor, for violating a sanctions settlement over transactio­ns with Iran and North Korea.

In November, Huawei said the moves against it would hinder the developmen­t of 5G in the US and raise prices for consumers. Still, the company’s phone business is successful. The Shenzhen-based company has overtaken Apple as the No. 2 global smartphone maker, shipping more than 52.2 million units in the third quarter, according to research analyst Gartner, Inc.

“This is what you call playing hard ball,” said Michael Every, head of Asia financial markets research at Rabobank in Hong Kong.

“China is already asking for her release, as can be expected, but if the charges are serious, don’t expect the US to blink.” —

 ?? REUTERS ?? A MAN walks by a Huawei logo at a shopping mall in Shanghai, China in this Dec. 6 photo.
REUTERS A MAN walks by a Huawei logo at a shopping mall in Shanghai, China in this Dec. 6 photo.

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