Huawei and ZTE have been banned from Sweden's 5G networks
Huawei continues to face difficulty as European countries back away from using its services for their nascent 5G networks.
This week, it was Sweden who chose to restrict Huawei and
ZTE from its 5G network, citing advice from the Swedish Armed Forces and the
Swedish Security Service.
"New installations and new implementation of central
functions for the radio use in the frequency bands must not be carried out with
products from the suppliers Huawei or ZTE," the Swedish Post and Telecom
Authority stated, adding, "If existing infrastructure for central
functions is to be used to provide services in the concerned frequency bands,
products from Huawei and ZTE must be phased out 1 January 2025 at the
latest."
In a comment to Reuters, Huawei decried the move, saying:
There are no factual grounds to support allegations of
Huawei posing any security threat. The exclusion of Huawei is simply based on
groundless presumption and is unfair and unacceptable.
This comes after the United Kingdom opted to remove Huawei
from its 5G network by 2027, with a later reccomendation pushing for a 2025
timeline instead. Huawei had accused that ban as being based on
"opinion."
Huawei had been accused of being a security risk by the
United States government in recent years. While the company has been under
siege legally for other dubious activity including IP theft and racketerring,
it continues to note that allegations revolving around national security have
never been proven.
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