October 8, 2020
1 min read

‘Evidence of collusion between Huawei, Chinese state’, UK MPs allege

The accusations in the new report have the potential to increase suspicions surrounding the company’s operations….Reports Asian Lite News

There is clear evidence of collusion between Huawei and the Chinese state, a UK parliamentary inquiry concluded in its report on Thursday.

The designation of Huawei as a “high-risk vendor” by the UK government is “appropriate and completely justified” with the correct steps being taken to remove it from the UK’s 5G, said the Defence Committee of the House of Commons.

During the course of the inquiry the UK government announced that Huawei technology will be removed from the UK’s 5G network by 2027.

However, the committee noted that developments could necessitate this date being moved forward, potentially to 2025.

The government should take necessary steps to minimise the delay and economic damage and consider providing compensation to operators if the 2027 deadline is moved forward, it suggested.

Huawei, however said that “this report lacks credibility as it is built on opinion rather than fact”, the BBC reported.

“We’re sure people will see through these accusations of collusion and remember instead what Huawei has delivered for Britain over the past 20 years,” a spokesman for the company was quoted as saying.

However, the accusations in the new report have the potential to increase suspicions surrounding the company’s operations.

The report, however, said that Huawei has been, and continues to be, “sufficiently distanced from sensitive defence and national security sites.”

“Protecting the public and preserving our nation’s security are amongst the principle responsibilities of Government. The decision to embed a technology that compromises this would constitute a gross dereliction of these duties,” Chair of the Defence Committee, Tobias Ellwood, said in a statement.

The West must urgently unite to advance a counterweight to China’s tech dominance, said the report.

The committee consulted a number of technical experts on 5G networks, telecom industry insiders and and academics for the inquiry.

Executives from Huawei were not asked to testify, although they appeared before a separate UK parliament committee in July.

Also read:Covid-19: Nearly 16K cases missed in UK daily figures

Previous Story

KOLKATA DIARY – The Effect of Cyclone in Sandarbans by Mohammed Reza Amirinia

Next Story

Mumbai Police Names Arnab’s Republic TV, Two Others In TRP Fraud

Latest from -Top News

UAE Eyes Investment in Pakistan

Sheikh Abdullah will hold a meeting with Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif UAE Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan arrived in Islamabad for a two-day visit

US VP Vance Lands in India

Vice President Vance, who began his international tour with a stop in Italy on Friday, landed at the Air Force Station in Palam, New Delhi…reports Asian Lite News United States Vice President

Kabila returns to Congo from exile 

Kabila, who left Congo in 2023, came to Goma “to participate in peace efforts” in the conflict-hit east where Rwanda-backed M23 rebels have seized large swaths of territory  Former Congolese President Joseph

India, Tanzania discuss strengthening bilateral ties 

Tanzania and India have traditionally enjoyed close, friendly, and cooperative relations. From the 1960s to the 1980s, the political relationship was characterised by shared commitments to anticolonialism, non-alignment   India’s External Affairs
Go toTop