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France, UK, Germany defy US bid to ban Huawei equipment

This photo shows the Huawei logo and signage at the company's main UK offices in Reading, west of London, on April 29, 2019. (Photo by AFP)

Several European nations have decided to break with US-led efforts to ban major Chinese telecommunications firm Huawei from their markets.

President Emmanuel Macron said on Friday it is not in France’s best interests to block Huawei, and that it would not be appropriate to wage a technological war or a trade battle.

Macron said he believed in cooperation and multilateralism to generate employment, expand businesses and improve innovation, signaling France's opposition to US trade practices. 

The president announced in Paris on Thursday that France will permit the Chinese company to build its 5G network infrastructure while safeguarding the country’s national security.

President of Germany's Federal Network Agency Jochen Homann also said on Thursday that Berlin does not plan to exclude Huawei from building its 5G network in the country.

His organization had recently updated the country’s network security requirements, saying any company that met the criteria could participate in network building.

Homann said no evidence has emerged so far showing that Huawei has acted against any regulations in Germany.

British authorities have also allowed Huawei to assist in building the "non-core" infrastructure of the country's 5G network.

The country’s telecommunications provider Vodafone has already declared plans to turn on its 5G service by using Huawei technology in the UK on July 3.

Huawei, meanwhile, intends to unveil its latest 5G smartphone -- the Mate 20 X -- in the UK next month.

Last Wednesday, US President Donald Trump announced a national emergency and signed an executive order, adding Huawei to a trade blacklist in a bid to curb its business dealings with companies.

The Chinese company lambasted as “unreasonable” Trump’s declaration to ban what he referred as telecommunications equipment from “foreign adversaries” which posed a national security risk.

“If the US restricts Huawei, it will not make the US safer, nor will it make the US stronger,” said Huawei in a statement cited in Chinese media reports.

The ban, it said, "will only force the US to use inferior and expensive alternative equipment, lagging behind other countries... and ultimately harming US companies and consumers."

'Europe bigger threat than China'

The US president further complained on Friday that the European Union’s trade barriers were damaging American manufacturing, making the bloc even more harmful to the US than China.

Addressing a gathering of real estate agents in Washington, Trump said, “The European Union treats us, I would say, worse than China, they’re just smaller.”

“They have trade barriers. They don’t want our farm products, they don’t want our cars. They send Mercedes-Benz’s in here like they’re cookies. They send BMWs here. We hardly tax them at all,” he added.

In a proclamation released on Friday, Trump declared that some imported vehicles and parts from the EU and Japan pose a national security threat to the US.


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