Bell, Telus give 5G contracts to Europeans, Huawei shut out
Two of Canada’s three major telecommunication companies
announced Tuesday they’ve decided not to use Chinese tech giant Huawei for
their next-generation 5G wireless network.
Bell Canada announced that Sweden-based Ericsson will be its
supplier and Telus Corp. later announced that it had also selected Ericsson and
Nokia. Rogers already has a longstanding partnership with Ericsson.
Canada and its security agencies have been studying whether
to use equipment from Huawei as phone carriers prepare to roll out
fifth-generation technology. 5G is designed to support a vast expansion of
networks to facilitate medical devices, self-driving cars and other technology.
Huawei is the world’s biggest supplier of network gear used
by phone and internet companies, but has long been seen as a front for spying
by China’s military and its highly skilled security services.
The U.S. has urged Canada to exclude Huawei equipment from
their next-generation wireless networks as they claim Huawei is legally
beholden to the Chinese regime. The United States and Australia have banned
Huawei, citing concerns it is an organ of Chinese military intelligence — a
charge the company denies.
“We look forward to the federal government completing its 5G
review and making an evidence-based decision about Huawei’s role in helping
build Canada’s next-generation wireless networks,” Huawei spokesman Alykhan
Velshi said in an email.
The Canadian government is studying the use of Huawei as
Canada and China are locked in a political dispute. China’s imprisonment of
Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor is widely seen as retaliation for
the arrest in Canada of Huawei senior executive Meng Wanzhou on a U.S.
extradition warrant. A Canadian judge ruled last week the U.S. extradition case
against a senior Huawei executive can proceed to the next stage.
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