Huawei is Open to European Supervision, Executive Speech Says

People walk past a Huawei store in Beijing on July 20, 2015. Chinese telecoms equipment giant Huawei said on July 20 that revenue surged 30 percent year-on-year in the first half, helped by "solid" sales of smartphones and growth in other business areas. AFP PHOTO / GREG BAKER People walk past a Huawei store in Beijing on July 20, 2015. Chinese telecoms equipment giant Huawei said on July 20 that revenue surged 30 percent year-on-year in the first half, helped by "solid" sales of smartphones and growth in other business areas. AFP PHOTO / GREG BAKER
<center>People walk past a Huawei store in Beijing on July 20, 2015. Chinese telecoms equipment giant Huawei said on July 20 that revenue surged 30 percent year-on-year in the first half, helped by "solid" sales of smartphones and growth in other business areas. AFP PHOTO / GREG BAKER</center>

Huawei wants cyber-security to be viewed as a technical rather than ideological issue and is open to supervision by European governments to prove the point, a senior company executive is expected to say on Thursday evening.

The comments due to be delivered in a speech by Abraham Liu, Huawei’s chief representative to EU institutions, come as the company finds itself under fire over ties with the Chinese government and suspicion that Beijing could use its technology for spying, which the company denies.

Liu will reiterate that Huawei has not and would never harm the interests of customers or countries.

“Cyber-security should remain as a technical issue instead of an ideological issue. Because technical issues can always be resolved through the right solutions while ideological issue cannot,” Liu will say at the company’s Chinese New Year reception in Brussels, according to a copy of his speech seen by Reuters.

“We are always willing to accept the supervision and suggestions of all European governments, customers and partners.”

Liu will say that Huawei devices, tested by multiple regulators and telecoms operators, have never caused any serious cyber-security breaches.

The United States has launched a campaign to convince European allies not to use equipment from the world’s biggest producer of telecoms gear for 5G networks, citing security risks.

The French Senate on Wednesday rejected proposed legislation aimed at toughening checks on telecoms equipment despite the US warnings. Germany has said it wants high data security standards for its 5G network.

source: Thomson Reuters 2019