The Daily Telegraph

Huawei employee claims he was jailed for wanting severance pay

- By Jamie Fullerton in Taipei and Yiyin Zhong in Beijing

A FORMER Huawei employee has claimed he was jailed for eight months after demanding severance pay from the Chinese phone giant.

Li Hongyuan, 35, who said he had worked for the company for 13 years, released court documents purportedl­y showing that he was held in January for extortion then released in August due to lack of evidence.

The news came as Julian King, Britain’s outgoing EU commission­er, suggested that the European Union would not impose a blanket ban on Huawei building 5G mobile networks but could warn its government­s against using the Chinese company.

Mr Li was detained in Shenzhen in December last year, after he had been sued by Huawei for “suspected extortion”. He claimed he was ultimately paid around 300,000 yuan (£33,000) severance fee, sent via a Huawei secretary’s personal bank account, with a reference saying the transactio­n was “economic compensati­on for terminatio­n”, according to reports.

The company cited the 300,000 yuan in the secretary’s account as evidence of the supposed extortion, but prosecutor­s dropped the charges in August.

Yesterday messages supporting Mr Li went viral on Chinese social media, with people raising questions about Chinese law punishing employees fighting for their labour rights.

Huawei has been asked by The Daily Telegraph to comment on Mr Li’s case.

In an open letter to Ren Zhengfei,

Huawei’s founder, Mr Li wrote: “It was not my original intention to cause so much attention online. Although I underwent the harshest revenge ... and my career was ended, I don’t regret my choice. In an era of twisted morals, man always pays a price for telling the truth.”

The publicity around the case has piled further pressure on Huawei, already under global scrutiny over fears about personal data use and suspect business practises.

Outside China Huawei defends its status as a private company, but within the country it often presents itself as being close to the CCP. Many countries view the company as an espionage threat, particular­ly the US.

A cyber security report released by the EU in October did not mention Huawei by name, but said that “threats posed by states or state-backed actors are perceived to be of highest relevance” with regards to 5G security. Huawei plans to roll out 5G services widely in 2020.

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