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Trump says US will discuss dropping charges against Chinese tech giant Huawei in coming weeks

Nan Yang

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Trump says US will discuss dropping charges against Chinese tech giant Huawei in coming weeks
  • ‘We’ll be talking to the US attorneys … the attorney general … We’ll be making that decision’, president says
  • Trump reiterates earlier comments that he does not want to ‘artificially block people out based on excuses or based on security’
Teddy Ng
Updated: Saturday, 23 Feb, 2019 12:13pm

US President Donald Trump said discussions on dropping criminal charges against Chinese telecom giant Huawei will be held in the coming weeks, after the two sides agreed to extend their trade negotiations in Washington for two more days.

In remarks seen as him raising the possibility of using the case as a bargaining chip, Trump said he “may or may not” include Huawei and another Chinese telecom company, ZTE Corp, in the trade deal.

While dropping the charges against Huawei was not currently under consideration, the issue would be raised, he told reporters at the White House during his meeting with Chinese Vice-Premier Liu He.

“We’re going to be discussing all of that during the course of the next couple of weeks,” he said. “We’ll be talking to the US attorneys. We’ll be talking to the attorney general. We’ll be making that decision.”

Huawei and its chief financial officer Sabrina Meng Wanzhou face nearly two dozen charges in the United States, which contends it violated economic sanctions and concealed its business dealings with Iran.

US President Donald Trump said discussions on dropping criminal charges against Chinese telecom giant Huawei will be held in the coming weeks, after the two sides agreed to extend their trade negotiations in Washington for two more days.

In remarks seen as him raising the possibility of using the case as a bargaining chip, Trump said he “may or may not” include Huawei and another Chinese telecom company, ZTE Corp, in the trade deal.

Huawei and its chief financial officer Sabrina Meng Wanzhou face nearly two dozen charges in the United States, which contends it violated economic sanctions and concealed its business dealings with Iran.

Meng was arrested on December 1 in Canada at the request of the US Justice Department. Although she has denied any wrongdoing, she is currently awaiting extradition proceedings and a hearing has been set for March 6.

A little over a week after Meng’s detention in Vancouver, Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor were arrested in China on separate charges of endangering national security.

According to Xie Maosong, a senior adviser to the Communist Party, the pair’s arrest could be key to securing Meng’s release as early as April.

Speaking on the sidelines of the South China Morning Post’s annual China Conference in Hong Kong on Thursday, he said he was confident Meng would be freed because of the “countermeasures” China had taken to put pressure on Canada.

While the US is planning to issue an executive order that would ban the use of Huawei equipment in its telecommunications networks, and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has been ramping up the pressure on America’s allies to do likewise, Trump bucked the trend, saying during the talks on Friday that he did not want to “artificially block people out based on excuses or based on security”.

“I want to have competition with China – fair competition,” he said. “I don’t want to block out anybody if we can help it. We want to have open competition.”

More....
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/dip...will-discuss-dropping-charges-against-chinese

Now...how does that makes Canada and those countries that stuck their neck out for US feel ?

All those talk about Rule of law b*** s***.
Insults our intelligence. The whole world knows what's going on.
 
Last edited:
These dmbfcks and their rule of law, it only applies when they are holding the guns. The whole thing was about leverage, US knew Huawei was selling stuff to Iran for decades, you can't arrest the citizen of another country because of your own laws, Huawei does not report to the US government, they are a Chinese Company following Chinese laws. If this case goes forward, China can arbitraryly arrest Americans, because of National Security. Notice how China did not arrest Americans and Trump did not directly arrest Meng, the collateral damage was vassal state Canada. The one who got fck in the end was Canada. LOL. Thats what happens when you are a slave state. freedom my ***.
 
Oh wait.
Looks like Trump is not exactly happy with the progress of the trade deal. So Meng's case can be brought to the fore anytime as the last ditch of his blackmailing antics.

In fact, many EU countries like France (Alstrom), Germany (Siemens) ... have been doing trading with the Iranians even in the midst of all the faking sanctions. Their nationals have not been arrested in any of the 5-eye territories despite many of their offices are set up in these lands.
 
bde35932-3710-11e9-b09f-892c410303c7_image_hires_121345.jpg

Trump says US will discuss dropping charges against Chinese tech giant Huawei in coming weeks
  • ‘We’ll be talking to the US attorneys … the attorney general … We’ll be making that decision’, president says
  • Trump reiterates earlier comments that he does not want to ‘artificially block people out based on excuses or based on security’
Teddy Ng
Updated: Saturday, 23 Feb, 2019 12:13pm

US President Donald Trump said discussions on dropping criminal charges against Chinese telecom giant Huawei will be held in the coming weeks, after the two sides agreed to extend their trade negotiations in Washington for two more days.

In remarks seen as him raising the possibility of using the case as a bargaining chip, Trump said he “may or may not” include Huawei and another Chinese telecom company, ZTE Corp, in the trade deal.

While dropping the charges against Huawei was not currently under consideration, the issue would be raised, he told reporters at the White House during his meeting with Chinese Vice-Premier Liu He.

“We’re going to be discussing all of that during the course of the next couple of weeks,” he said. “We’ll be talking to the US attorneys. We’ll be talking to the attorney general. We’ll be making that decision.”

Huawei and its chief financial officer Sabrina Meng Wanzhou face nearly two dozen charges in the United States, which contends it violated economic sanctions and concealed its business dealings with Iran.

US President Donald Trump said discussions on dropping criminal charges against Chinese telecom giant Huawei will be held in the coming weeks, after the two sides agreed to extend their trade negotiations in Washington for two more days.

In remarks seen as him raising the possibility of using the case as a bargaining chip, Trump said he “may or may not” include Huawei and another Chinese telecom company, ZTE Corp, in the trade deal.

Huawei and its chief financial officer Sabrina Meng Wanzhou face nearly two dozen charges in the United States, which contends it violated economic sanctions and concealed its business dealings with Iran.

Meng was arrested on December 1 in Canada at the request of the US Justice Department. Although she has denied any wrongdoing, she is currently awaiting extradition proceedings and a hearing has been set for March 6.

A little over a week after Meng’s detention in Vancouver, Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor were arrested in China on separate charges of endangering national security.

According to Xie Maosong, a senior adviser to the Communist Party, the pair’s arrest could be key to securing Meng’s release as early as April.

Speaking on the sidelines of the South China Morning Post’s annual China Conference in Hong Kong on Thursday, he said he was confident Meng would be freed because of the “countermeasures” China had taken to put pressure on Canada.

While the US is planning to issue an executive order that would ban the use of Huawei equipment in its telecommunications networks, and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has been ramping up the pressure on America’s allies to do likewise, Trump bucked the trend, saying during the talks on Friday that he did not want to “artificially block people out based on excuses or based on security”.

“I want to have competition with China – fair competition,” he said. “I don’t want to block out anybody if we can help it. We want to have open competition.”

More....
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/dip...will-discuss-dropping-charges-against-chinese

Now...how does that makes Canada and those countries that stuck their neck out for US feel ?

All those talk about Rule of law b*** s***.
Insults our intelligence. The whole world knows what's going on.

it's about time! :D

who wants to be classified as the bad guy while being just another good guy?

i wouldn't want that happening to me-self either :D

lol
 

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