The famously secretive company launched a media offensive at the
Mobile World Congress which wraps up in Barcelona on Thursday against US
accusations that its cheap equipment used in telecommunications
infrastructure across the globe is a Trojan horse for potential Chinese
state spying and sabotage.
The United States considers the matter urgent as countries around the
world prepare to roll out fifth-generation,or 5G, networks that will
bring near-instantaneous connectivity that can enable futuristic
technologies such as self-driving cars.
On Sunday on the eve of the start of the fair, which companies
usually reserve to unveil their new devices, top Huawei officials held
several press conferences and meetings with reporters where they
strenuously rejected Washington’s claims.
“We need to be more transparent, and that means speaking out more
often,” Huawei’s president for Western Europe, Vincent Ping, told
reporters on Monday.
The highlight of the media offensive came Tuesday when one of
Huawei’s rotating chairmen, Guo Ping, delivered a keynote speech where
reiterated the company’s position that there are no “backdoors” in its
5G tech that could allow Beijing to spy on countries.
“The US security accusation against our 5G has no evidence. Nothing.
The irony is that the US Cloud Act allow their entities to access data
across borders,” he told a packed auditorium, speaking in English.
This argument was echoed by several telecoms operators and government delegations at the trade fair.
“Security is a matter of concern if it has been proven. But for now,
we just hear speculations from the US about Huawei over questions of
security,” Malawi’s Minister for Communications Technology told AFP.
“Huawei is quite aggressive in this industry and they are a step
ahead of the other players. We just want to appreciate all the questions
of security as a matter of concern but we need that countries as US
show us the problems in order to help us.”
Nick Read, the head of Vodafone, the world’s second largest mobile
operator, said Washington “clearly needed” to share the evidence it has
against Huawei with European authorities so they can decide whether or
not to use the Chinese firm’s tech.
Washington sent a large delegation of its own to the trade fair,
which draws some 100,000 people from across the telecoms industry, to
press its case with industry executives and its foreign counterparts.
‘Insult to our industry’
But it appears to have failed to dissuade other countries.
Huawei announced it had signed ten commercial contracts or
partnership agreements for 5G with ten telecoms operators including
Switzerland’s Sunrise, Iceland’s Nova, Saudi Arabia’s STC and Turkey’s
Turkcell.
“This is an insult to our industry. We do know how to run tests and
protect our networks, we always have,” Turkcell chief executive officer
Kaan Terzioglu told AFP when asked about Washington’s campaign against
Huawei.
“I am very happy with what Huawei is providing us and I don’t
differenciate where tech is coming from. We never work with a single
provider, we use mainly Ericsson and Huawei and we are very happy with
those vendors.”
Huawei’s 5G equipment is seen as being considerably more advanced
than that of its rivals such as Sweden’s Ericsson or Finland’s Nokia.
Huawei however has not managed to convince US operators to use its equipment.
Three of the biggest US telecoms operators are involved in major
deals that require regulatory approval which will make it hard for them
to defy Washington’s opposition to the use of Huawei equipment, a
telecoms specialist who asked not to be named said.
Sprint has launched a bid to buy Time Warner while Sprint and
T-Mobile are trying to merge and do not want to anger the US
administration, the source added.
Chinese telecoms giant Huawei racked up a slew of
deals to sell 5G equipment at the world’s top mobile fair in Spain
despite Washington’s campaign to convince its allies bar the firm from
their next-generation wireless networks.
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