The Trump administration said on Wednesday that it will impose travel bans on employees of the Chinese technology giant Huawei
The Trump administration said on Wednesday that it
will impose travel bans on employees of the Chinese technology giant Huawei and
other Chinese companies the United States determines are assisting
authoritarian governments in cracking down on human rights, including in
China's western Xinjiang province.
US Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo also said the administration is finalising plans to minimise data
theft from the popular Chinese video streaming app TikTok, although he stopped
short of saying it would be banned outright.
Pompeo made the
announcements a day after the British government said it would ban Huawei from its 5G networks over concerns that
sensitive data could be compromised by the Chinese Communist Party.
Pompeo told reporters
at a State Department news conference that Huawei employees found to be
providing "material support to regimes engaging in human rights violations
and abuses globally” would be hit with sanctions.
“Companies impacted by today’s action include
Huawei, an arm of the CCP’s surveillance state that censors political
dissidents and enables mass internment camps in Xinjiang and the indentured
servitude of its population shipped all over China,” he said. “Certain Huawei
employees provide material support to the CCP regime that commits human rights
abuses.
“Telecommunications
companies around the world should consider themselves on notice: If they are
doing business with Huawei, they are doing business with human rights abusers,”
Pompeo said.
Huawei said it was
“disappointed” in the decision, which it called “unfair".
“Huawei operates
independent of the Chinese government,” it said in a statement. “We are a
private, employee-owned firm. We are disappointed by this unfair and arbitrary
action to restrict visas of our employees who work tirelessly to contribute to
technological innovation in the US and around the world.”
At a later event
sponsored by the hill newspaper, Pompeo said the administration was
also looking at how to prevent data theft from TikTok and other Chinese
companies.
“Whether it’s TikTok or
any of the other Chinese communications platforms, apps, infrastructure, this
administration has taken seriously the requirement to protect the American
people from having their information end up in the hands of the Chinese
Communist Party,” he said. “And so we are working through a process where all
the relevant agencies and the private sector are getting to say their piece. We
hope to have a set of decisions shortly which will reflect this central
understanding.”
White House Chief of
Staff Mark Meadows told reporters on Air Force One that administration
officials are looking at the national security risks associated with TikTok,
WeChat and other apps gathering information on American citizens. He said there
is no deadline for action, but said it was likely weeks, not months.
It is not clear how
many Huawei employees would be affected. Huawei says on its website that it has
more than 194,000 employees in more than 170 countries and regions.
The US has led a
worldwide campaign to convince foreign governments, particularly those in
allied nations, to bar Huawei from their advanced telecommunications networks,
arguing that allowing them into those systems would lead to violations of their
citizens’ privacy.
The US has also
threatened Nato and other allies with curtailments or suspensions in
intelligence sharing and cooperation should they allow Huawei components or
technology in their high-speed networks.
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