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#1 劉病已
14/07/20 12:19

Huawei blocked: Tech must be stripped from UK's 5G network by 2027

Greg Heffer, political reporter

The government admits the move will delay the roll-out of 5G in the UK by two to three years and increase costs by up to £2bn.

Boris Johnson has ordered all Huawei technology to be stripped out of the UK's 5G network by 2027.

In a major U-turn, the prime minister also banned the purchase of any new 5G equipment from the Chinese tech giant from the end of this year.

The government acknowledged the move would delay the roll-out of 5G in the UK by two to three years and increase costs by up to £2bn.

Acting on the advice of the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), Mr Johnson has accepted new US sanctions on Huawei are a "game changer" in relation to the impact of the firm's technology on the UK's national security.

Downing Street had previously allowed Huawei to have a role in the UK's 5G infrastructure - a decision that came little more than six months ago.

Mr Johnson and senior ministers agreed to the removal of Huawei technology within the next seven years at a meeting of the National Security Council in Downing Street on Tuesday morning.

Sky News' defence and security correspondent Alistair Bunkall said there were some "tense exchanges" during the NSC meeting.

An existing ban on Huawei's involvement in the most senstive parts of the UK's 5G networks - announced in January when the prime minister previously gave the go-ahead for the firm to build mobile infrastructure - remains in place.

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden confirmed Tuesday's further action on Huawei in a statement to the House of Commons, as he announced the measures would be put into law by a forthcoming Telecoms Security Bill.

He told MPs: "By the time of the next election we will have implemented in law an irreversible path for the complete removal of Huawei equipment from our 5G networks.

"We have not taken this decision lightly and I must be frank about the decision's consequences for every constituency in this country; this will delay our roll-out of 5G."

Mr Dowden said the measures introduced both in January and on Tuesday would cause a cumulative delay to the roll-out of 5G in the UK of two to three years and increase costs by up to £2bn.

Critics have long alleged Huawei has close links to the Chinese government and its equipment could be used for espionage purposes - something the company has always denied.

Huawei describes itself as a private company "fully owned by its employees".

In January, Mr Johnson confirmed Huawei would be able to build "non-core" parts of the UK's 5G network, but with a series of conditions attached to the company's involvement.

This included capping Huawei's market share at 35% and blocking it from involvement in the most sensitive areas of the network.

The prime minister's decision angered US President Donald Trump - who was reported to have been "apoplectic" with Mr Johnson in a telephone call.

In May, the US placed more sanctions on Huawei to block the firm from using computer chips based on American designs in any of its equipment.

This led to fears the company could begin to use "untrusted" replacement technologies and prompted the NCSC's review of January's decision.

They are understood to have concluded there were no alternative products on the market for which the UK could have confidence in.

The NCSC had "significantly changed their security assessment" of Huawei's presence in the UK's 5G network in the wake of the US sanctions, Mr Dowden told MPs.

He added: "Given the uncertainty that this creates around Huawei's supply chain, the UK can no longer be confident it will be able to guarantee the security of future Huawei 5G equipment affected by the change in US foreign direct-product rules."

In recent months, an increasing number of Conservative MPs spoke out about Huawei's involvement in the UK in recent months, which piled pressure on Mr Johnson to reverse January's decision.

Dissent on the Tory benches in the House of Commons had also grown amid wider concerns about China, including Beijing's response to the coronavirus pandemic, its imposition of a new security law on Hong Kong, and its treatment of Uighur people.

On Tuesday morning, ahead of the National Security Council meeting, former Conservative leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith told Sky News that "you can't separate" Chinese firms and the Chinese government.

"Across the free world, more and more countries are now recognising that they face a particular threat now from Chinese government intentions," he said.

#2 你有票 我唔要呀
14/07/20 12:25

2027...

6G年代嘅時候終於全面禁到華為參與5G建設lu

#3 劉病已
14/07/20 12:26

2027...

6G年代嘅時候終於全面禁到華為參與5G建設lu

2027係將裝咗嘅拆落嚟

#4 你有票 我唔要呀
14/07/20 12:29

2027...

6G年代嘅時候終於全面禁到華為參與5G建設lu

2027係將裝咗嘅拆落嚟

有分別咩

用成7年,然後拆咗佢換6G

有心做唔好講即時換,2023/2024前乜都搞好佢啦

#5 九七淪陷
14/07/20 12:41

2027...

6G年代嘅時候終於全面禁到華為參與5G建設lu

2027係將裝咗嘅拆落嚟

有分別咩

用成7年,然後拆咗佢換6G

有心做唔好講即時換,2023/2024前乜都搞好佢啦

係咪因為簽咗約, 啲公司唔肯提前解約蝕錢

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