Caixin
Caixin Global – Latest China News & Headlines

Home >

TRENDING
Humanoid Robot Maker Unitree Advances Toward $618 Million Shanghai IPO
In Depth: Huawei’s Bid to Rewrite the Rules of Chip Scaling
Chinese Chipmaker YMTC Claims 13% of $46 Billion Global NAND Market
LATEST
China Launches New Reusable Rocket to Accelerate Satellite Deployment
DJI, Insta360 Lock Horns in Camera Pricing Standoff
Tencent Gains $53 Billion in Value on Reports of WeChat AI Agents
Chinese Chipmaker YMTC Claims 13% of $46 Billion Global NAND Market
China’s Robotics Funding Frenzy Picks Up
China Arms Itself With New Legal Tools to Scruntinize Overseas Investment
Zhipu Seeks $2.2 Billion Shanghai Listing to Fuel AI Expansion
In Depth: Huawei’s Bid to Rewrite the Rules of Chip Scaling
Humanoid Robot Maker Unitree Advances Toward $618 Million Shanghai IPO
MiniMax Eyes Shanghai Listing as China AI Firms Chase Capital
China AI Developer Zhipu Hits Record $112 Billion Valuation
Luxshare Gets Lenient Antitrust Fine Over Wingtech Deal
Flying-Car Startup Volant Raises $147 Million Ahead of Potential IPO
ChangXin Clears Key Hurdle for Record STAR Market IPO
Xiaomi Slashes AI Model API Prices by 99% to Match DeepSeek
Huawei Targets 1.4-Nanometer Chip Performance by 2031 With New Design Architecture
DeepSeek Cuts Flagship AI Model Prices by 75% as Funding Round Looms
Wingtech Sues Nexperia in China, Seeking $1.2 Billion and Control of Equity
DJI Says Mass Adoption of Delivery Drones, Flying Vehicles Still on the Distant Horizon
Nvidia Still Not Sure It Can Sell H200 Chips in China

By Tanner Brown / Dec 10, 2018 04:39 PM / Politics & Law

Even before Huawei’s Meng Wanzhou was arrested last week in Canada, the company was the talk of the town.

Why?

Because at least six countries have expressed security concerns about working with the Chinese telecom giant.

Those countries are: the U.S., Australia, New Zealand, the U.K., Japan, and Germany.

Huawei is the world’s second-largest smartphone-maker, but is also one of the world’s biggest producers of telecommunications equipment, including potentially sensitive high-tech infrastructure. Several countries have outright blocked Huawei from supplying 5G equipment to their telecommunications operators.

But these reports don’t seem to have made their way to China’s foreign ministry.

Lu Kang, the ministry’s spokesman, said today that China had never heard of any country having a security problem with Huawei, Reuters reported.

China has jumped strongly to Huawei’s defense after Meng was arrested by Canadian police at the request of the U.S., which has accused her of fraud in connection with a bid to sell American goods to Iran.

Meng’s bail hearing is set to resume Monday morning in Vancouver.

See more of Caixin’s Huawei coverage here.

Share this article
Open WeChat and scan the QR code