Business World

German minister backs tougher rules on telecoms suppliers

- RND RND. RND

BERLIN — Interior Minister Horst Seehofer has thrown his weight behind a proposal to reform Germany’s telecommun­ications law to toughen security requiremen­ts on foreign network vendors, the group of newspapers reported on Tuesday.

Mr. Seehofer’s interventi­on increases the likelihood that Germany will tighten oversight over Huawei Technologi­es, sidesteppi­ng pressure from the US to exclude the Chinese company from its market.

Government and industry leaders want clarity on the ground rules before Germany embarks on the buildout of next-generation 5G mobile networks by auctioning spectrum in late March.

Citing participan­ts at a meeting of conservati­ves and Social Democrats, who rule together in a grand coalition, said Mr. Seehofer’s aim was to better control Huawei — and not to ban it.

The best way to achieve this would be by amending an article in Germany’s Telecommun­ications Act that addresses security. This would apply to all vendors and should not be viewed as a direct response to Huawei, coalition sources told

Consultati­ons are continuing, a senior government source told Reuters earlier on Tuesday, and a final decision on whether to let Chinese firms participat­e in 5G is unlikely within the next two weeks.

Work still needs to be done to address costs, feasibilit­y and security measures, said the source, pushing back against reports in the German business press that officials had hammered out a common approach.

Chancellor Angela Merkel has said Germany needs guarantees that Huawei would not hand data to the Chinese state before it can take part in building fifth-generation networks that would link everything from vehicles to factories at far greater speeds. Such a no-spy pledge would come in addition to a catalogue of security measures toughening certificat­ion procedures to minimize the risk that network equipment comes fitted with ‘back doors’ that would expose it to cyber espionage.

Huawei, the global networks market leader with annual sales exceeding $100 billion, faces internatio­nal scrutiny over its ties with the Chinese government and suspicion Beijing could use its technology for spying, which the company denies.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo drove home that message in Budapest on Monday, cautioning allies in central Europe that deploying equipment from Huawei would make it more difficult for Washington “to partner alongside them.”

Germany’s three telecoms operators — Deutsche Telekom, Vodafone and Telefonica Deutschlan­d — use Huawei equipment in their networks and have warned that curbing their choice of vendors could be costly.

Deutsche Telekom has, for its part, proposed a series of measures to safeguard security, including setting up an independen­t laboratory to scrutinize equipment used in critical infrastruc­ture before it is deployed in the field. —

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