Bangkok Post

State firms asked to avoid business trips to US, allies

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China asked some state-run enterprise­s to avoid business trips to the US and its allies and to take extra precaution­s to protect their devices if they need to travel, according to people familiar with the request. In recent weeks, the State-Owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission (Sasac) — a regulatory body that oversees about 100 government-run companies — has told some firms to only take secure, companyiss­ued laptops meant for overseas use if travelling is necessary, the people said. They said the warning extended to countries in the Five Eyes intelligen­cesharing pact: the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. The order also said that employees should have the company verify which files they are carrying on any trip and only store them on secure USB flash drives, two people familiar with the warning said separately, adding that Sasac didn’t specify how long the travel rules will apply. Chinese and American executives have become more cautious when travelling after the December arrest of Huawei Technologi­es Co executive Meng Wanzhou in Canada on behalf of the US, and the subsequent detention of two Canadian citizens in China. The US has also stepped up efforts to catch and prosecute executives at Chinese companies that it alleges steal technology, which has resulted in several legal actions. In January, state-owned Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit Co and its Taiwan-based partner United Microelect­ronics Corp were the first companies indicted under the US Justice Department’s new initiative. The companies pleaded not guilty. China has repeatedly denied the accusation­s. Ms Meng was charged with conspiracy to defraud banks in relation to transactio­ns that violated US sanctions against Iran, an allegation that comes as the Trump administra­tion seeks to limit Chinese telecom companies from dominating 5G wireless networks. She has denied wrongdoing.

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