U.S. sanctions turn up heat but Huawei serving European 5G clients, executive says

Sun, Oct 11, 2020
By editor
2 MIN READ

Foreign

CHINESE telecom giant Huawei is finding it harder to counter U.S. sanctions designed to choke off its access to semiconductors but can continue to serve European 5G network clients, a senior European executive told an Austrian newspaper.

The world’s biggest maker of mobile telecommunications equipment and smartphones was still “looking for a solution” to help millions of Huawei phone users after Google  was banned from providing technical support for new Huawei phone models using mobile operating system Android.

“Since the U.S. sanctions last year, U.S. manufacturers of semiconductors are no longer allowed to supply us so our previous U.S. partners can no longer work with us.

Since August it has become even more difficult,” Abraham Liu, Huwaei’s vice-president for Europe, told the Kurier paper.

He said Washington was “blackmailing” chipmakers into shunning ties with Huawei, which denies U.S. allegations that Huawei equipment could be used by Beijing for spying.

“Nevertheless, we are confident that we can continue to serve our European customers in the 5G sector because of many preparations and upfront investments with the most advanced technology,” Liu was quoted as saying without elaborating.

“As for private customers, cell phone owners, we see great difficulties.

There are 90 million European Huawei users. Google is no longer allowed to work with Huawei, so Google will no longer publish updates for Huawei smartphones with the Android operating system,” he said.

“We are still looking for a solution.”

Amid U.S. pressure to exclude the Chinese firm from supplying key telecoms equipment, Orange and Proximus  last week picked Nokia to help build 5G networks in Belgium.

EUmembers have been stepping up scrutiny of so-called high-risk vendors.

This subjects Huawei’s governance and technology to critical examination and is likely to lead other European operators to strip it from their networks, analysts say.

– Oct. 11, 2020 @ 15:09 GMT |

Tags:


No fewer than 20 children killed in Pakistan airstrikes : UN

THE United Nations in Afghanistan on Thursday confirmed  that it received credible reports that dozens of civilians, including women and...

Read More
Koreans, Nigerians celebrate 2024 Nobel Prize laureate, Han Kang

KOREANS and Nigerians in Federal Capital Territory (FCT), on  Friday  celebrated Korean literary icon, Han Kang, for winning the 2024  Nobel...

Read More
Morocco accelerates regionalisation process with 4 new agreements

TANGIER (Morocco), Dec. 21, 2024 (NAN) The Kingdom of Morocco’s 12 regions and several ministerial departments, have signed four framework...

Read More