What's new

Merkel Faces Revolt Over Huawei as Lawmakers Seek Full Ban

F-22Raptor

ELITE MEMBER
Jun 19, 2014
17,112
3
21,676
Country
United States
Location
United States
German Chancellor Angela Merkel is facing a potential revolt in parliament by lawmakers seeking to override her China policy and effectively ban equipment supplier Huawei Technologies Co. from the country’s fifth-generation wireless network.

A bill drafted by lawmakers in Merkel’s ruling coalition stipulates that German authorities should be able to exclude “untrustworthy” 5G equipment vendors from “core as well as peripheral networks.” That goes beyond previous calls that sought to ban the Chinese firm from the more sensitive core network alone.

The effort in the Bundestag, Germany’s lower house of parliament, is a major challenge to Merkel’s attempts at balancing security considerations over 5G with Germany’s delicate economic ties with China. Hawks in her government, including German intelligence agencies and the Interior Ministry, have warned that Huawei’s ties to the government in Beijing pose a security risk.

While the draft doesn’t explicitly name Huawei, it’s tailored to the Chinese company and comes after months of debate about 5G security. Huawei has repeatedly denied allegations over potential espionage and sabotage.


The draft legislation obtained by Bloomberg News says that security guidelines set out by Merkel’s government, which include a certification process and a declaration of trustworthiness, don’t go far enough. The political and legal systems in a vendor’s country of origin must also be taken into account, the draft says in a direct allusion to China.

While negotiators haggle over a final draft, the stringent security standards set by lawmakers in Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union-led bloc and in the Social Democratic party illustrate the momentum building against the Shenzhen-based technology giant. CDU lawmakers approved a motion at a party convention last month calling for further restrictions.

European Solutions
Calling 5G technology Germany’s “digital nervous system,” lawmakers said that Europe already possessed two companies that represent an alternative to “state subsidized” competitors posing a threat -- a reference to Finland’s Nokia Oyj and Sweden’s Ericsson AB.


“It is thus in Germany’s own interest to rely on European solutions with respect to the 5G network expansion and to cultivate European champions,” the draft said.

Excluding Huawei from the peripheral network -- and not just the more sensitive core -- would create headaches for Germany’s telecom companies, who have warned that banning the vendor would delay the county’s 5G build-out and make it more expensive.Telefonica SA’s German unit, which operates the country’s second-largest wireless network, earlier this week said Wednesday it picked Huawei and Nokia to take an equal role in supplying its 5G network upgrade.

The Merkel government had proposed a compromise that imposes partial restrictionsthat Telecom executives were prepared to accept as long as the Chinese vendor had access to less sensitive parts.

But the lawmakers’ proposal would even go beyond a recommendation by Merkel’s spy chief, Bruno Kahl, the head of the Federal Intelligence Service. While Huawei is too dependent on the Chinese Communist Party and “can’t be fully trusted,” Kahl said in October, “there may be areas where a participation doesn’t have to be excluded.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...revolt-over-huawei-as-lawmakers-seek-full-ban
 
And in other recent news......

Huawei Strikes German 5G Deal Despite Political Pushback
Telefónica becomes the first operator in Germany to publicly commit to the Chinese vendor
im-135201

China’s Huawei was picked to supply 5G equipment for Germany.PHOTO: HANNIBAL HANSCHKE/REUTERS


BySara Germano
Dec. 11, 2019 10:49 am ET

BERLIN—Huawei Technologies Inc. secured a commitment to build part of Germany’s 5G infrastructure, strengthening its position in Europe’s largest economy despite calls from lawmakers to bar the Chinese company.

Telefónica SA, one of three major mobile operators in Germany, said Wednesday it planned to use equipment from Huawei and Finland-based Nokia Corp. to build its 5G wireless network in the country—subject to Huawei equipment meeting government security standards.

“Telefónica Germany has clearly taken care not to pre-empt the ongoing political process of defining these security guidelines and at the same time not to delay the start of the 5G rollout,” Klaus Schulze-Löwenberg, a spokesman for the carrier, said.

The company said Nokia and Huawei would be “equally responsible” for supplying equipment for 5G antenna technology, with the selection of vendors for the more-sensitive core network coming sometime next year.

Telefónica’s decision marks the first public commitment to use Huawei equipment for 5G by one of Germany’s three main wireless operators, which also include domestic leader Deutsche Telekom AG and Vodafone Group PLC.
 
German Chancellor Angela Merkel is facing a potential revolt in parliament by lawmakers seeking to override her China policy and effectively ban equipment supplier Huawei Technologies Co. from the country’s fifth-generation wireless network.

A bill drafted by lawmakers in Merkel’s ruling coalition stipulates that German authorities should be able to exclude “untrustworthy” 5G equipment vendors from “core as well as peripheral networks.” That goes beyond previous calls that sought to ban the Chinese firm from the more sensitive core network alone.

The effort in the Bundestag, Germany’s lower house of parliament, is a major challenge to Merkel’s attempts at balancing security considerations over 5G with Germany’s delicate economic ties with China. Hawks in her government, including German intelligence agencies and the Interior Ministry, have warned that Huawei’s ties to the government in Beijing pose a security risk.

While the draft doesn’t explicitly name Huawei, it’s tailored to the Chinese company and comes after months of debate about 5G security. Huawei has repeatedly denied allegations over potential espionage and sabotage.


The draft legislation obtained by Bloomberg News says that security guidelines set out by Merkel’s government, which include a certification process and a declaration of trustworthiness, don’t go far enough. The political and legal systems in a vendor’s country of origin must also be taken into account, the draft says in a direct allusion to China.

While negotiators haggle over a final draft, the stringent security standards set by lawmakers in Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union-led bloc and in the Social Democratic party illustrate the momentum building against the Shenzhen-based technology giant. CDU lawmakers approved a motion at a party convention last month calling for further restrictions.

European Solutions
Calling 5G technology Germany’s “digital nervous system,” lawmakers said that Europe already possessed two companies that represent an alternative to “state subsidized” competitors posing a threat -- a reference to Finland’s Nokia Oyj and Sweden’s Ericsson AB.


“It is thus in Germany’s own interest to rely on European solutions with respect to the 5G network expansion and to cultivate European champions,” the draft said.

Excluding Huawei from the peripheral network -- and not just the more sensitive core -- would create headaches for Germany’s telecom companies, who have warned that banning the vendor would delay the county’s 5G build-out and make it more expensive.Telefonica SA’s German unit, which operates the country’s second-largest wireless network, earlier this week said Wednesday it picked Huawei and Nokia to take an equal role in supplying its 5G network upgrade.

The Merkel government had proposed a compromise that imposes partial restrictionsthat Telecom executives were prepared to accept as long as the Chinese vendor had access to less sensitive parts.

But the lawmakers’ proposal would even go beyond a recommendation by Merkel’s spy chief, Bruno Kahl, the head of the Federal Intelligence Service. While Huawei is too dependent on the Chinese Communist Party and “can’t be fully trusted,” Kahl said in October, “there may be areas where a participation doesn’t have to be excluded.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...revolt-over-huawei-as-lawmakers-seek-full-ban
More like an exaggerated article. Noticed that those who rejected are from lower liuse parliament which holds very little power. And I doubt German intelligent didn't realised most of the spying are in fact done by US on Germany rather than China.
 
More like an exaggerated article. Noticed that those who rejected are from lower liuse parliament which holds very little power. And I doubt German intelligent didn't realised most of the spying are in fact done by US on Germany rather than China.
The lower house (Bundestag) is the entity that sets the guidance to foreign countries. The upper house (Bundesrat) seldom rejects any law that does not concern their territory sovereignty (Bundesland).

In western democracy it is the lower house that holds the power.

The upper house has the function of a control instance.

Merkel has no veto power if the law to ban Huawei is set in motion. Only the president of Germany has the veto power. He can stop it.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 1, Members: 0, Guests: 1)


Back
Top Bottom