Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. blacklists firms; China says ‘stay tuned’

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

China signaled that it would hit back after the Trump administra­tion placed eight of the country’s technology giants on a blacklist over reported human-rights violations against Muslim minorities. At the same time, the Trump administra­tion is moving ahead with discussion­s around possible restrictio­ns on portfolio flows into China, with a particular focus on investment­s made by U.S. government retirement funds, people familiar with the internal deliberati­ons said.

Asked Tuesday whether China would retaliate over the technology blacklist, foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters “stay tuned.” He also denied that the government abused human rights in the far west region of Xinjiang.

“We urge the U.S. side to immediatel­y correct its mistake, withdraw the relevant decision and stop interferin­g in China’s internal affairs,” Geng said in Beijing. “China will continue to take firm and forceful measures to resolutely safeguard national sovereignt­y, security and developmen­t interests.”

The Trump administra­tion’s move, which was announced after U.S. markets closed, came on the same day as negotiator­s from the two sides began workinglev­el preparatio­ns for high-level talks set to begin Thursday in Washington. A U.S. Commerce Department spokesman said the “action

is unrelated to the trade negotiatio­ns,” and China confirmed that Vice Premier Liu He would lead the delegation as planned.

The blacklist, first reported by Reuters, still takes President Donald Trump’s economic war against China in a new direction, marking the first time his administra­tion has cited human rights as a reason for action. Past moves to blacklist companies such as Huawei Technologi­es Co. have been taken on national security grounds.

China has plowed billions of dollars into companies developing advanced hardware and software to catch up with the United States. Some of the companies added to the list Monday are among the world’s most valuable artificial-intelligen­ce startups.

Much of that technology — including facial recognitio­n and computer vision — can be used to track people. That includes smartphone tracking, voice-pattern identifica­tion and systems that track individual­s across cities through powerful cameras. Washington officials have grown increasing­ly worried about China’s ambitions to export its systems elsewhere, including places known for human-rights abuses.

The companies on the blacklist include two video surveillan­ce companies — Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology Co. and Zhejiang Dahua Technology Co. — that by some accounts control as much as a third of the global market for video surveillan­ce and have cameras all over the world.

Also targeted were SenseTime Group Ltd. — the world’s most valuable artificial intelligen­ce startup — and fellow artificial intelligen­ce giant Megvii Technology Ltd., which is said to be aiming to raise up to $1 billion in a Hong Kong initial public offering. Backed by Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., the pair are at the forefront of China’s ambition to dominate artificial intelligen­ce developmen­t in coming years.

Entities on the list are prohibited from doing business with American companies without being granted a U.S. government license, although some have maintained relationsh­ips with banned companies through internatio­nal subsidiari­es.

“Specifical­ly, these entities have been implicated in human rights violations and abuses in the implementa­tion of China’s campaign of repression, mass arbitrary detention, and high-technology surveillan­ce against Uighurs, Kazakhs, and other members of Muslim minority groups” in Xinjiang, the U.S. Commerce Department said in a Federal Register notice published Monday.

The foreign ministry’s Geng accused the U.S. of having “sinister intentions.” “The measures taken by China to eliminate extremism from the roots are fully in line with Chinese law and internatio­nal practice,” he said.

SenseTime and Dahua weren’t immediatel­y available for comment outside of normal business hours.

“Hikvision strongly opposes today’s decision by the U.S. government and it will hamper efforts by global companies to improve human rights around the world,” the company said in a statement.

Megvii said the U.S. had “no grounds” to put it on the list, and noted that Human Rights Watch had corrected a report that implicated the company. It added that it hadn’t earned revenue from Xinjiang in the first part of the year, and the impact on its business from the designatio­n was minimal.

The move targets Chinese surveillan­ce companies involved in the crackdown in Xinjiang, where as many as a million Uighur Muslims have been placed in mass detention camps, prompting criticism from around the world. The White House in May had readied the sanction package for surveillan­ce technology companies accused of human rights violations, but decided to hold back because of the trade negotiatio­ns.

Also to be placed on the Commerce Department’s “entity list” are the Xinjiang region’s public security bureau and 18 other municipal and county public security bureaus as well as the province’s police college.

Meanwhile, the Trump administra­tion efforts to restrict investment portfolio flows into China are advancing even after American officials pushed back strongly against a Bloomberg News report late last month that a range of such limits was under review.

According to people familiar with the meetings, the administra­tion’s focus is now on ways to further scrutinize index providers’ decision to add Chinese firms they consider a material risk for American investors. It’s still unclear what legal authority the White House would rely on to force major indexes to drop certain Chinese companies.

At least one of the issues under considerat­ion is time-sensitive. The Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board in 2017 made a decision that by mid-2020 the internatio­nal fund offered to workers in the government’s retirement savings plan would mirror the Morgan Stanley Capital Internatio­nal All Country World Index, which captures emerging markets, including China. The board is scheduled to meet Oct. 21.

Some U.S. lawmakers and China critics outside the government have pushed the board to reverse that decision and, if necessary, have the administra­tion use executive power to protect U.S. government workers.

They argue that Americans are harmed by channeling money into Chinese firms that are suspected of human-rights violations and at the center of U.S. national security concerns.

The change would expose almost $50 billion in retirement assets of federal government employees, including members of the U.S. Armed Forces, to severe and undisclose­d material risks associated with many of the Chinese companies listed on the index, opponents argue.

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