by Elizabeth LAW
BEIJING, China (AFP) — China threw its weight behind Huawei’s legal battle against the United States on Friday, vowing to take all necessary measures to defend the “legitimate rights” of Chinese companies and individuals.
Foreign Minister Wang Yi voiced Beijing’s support as Huawei mounts a legal and public relations campaign to counter US warnings that the company’s networks and equipment could serve as Trojan horses for Chinese intelligence services.
US prosecutors have also charged the company and its chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, over allegations of violating Iran sanctions.
“It’s quite obvious to any fair and unbiased person that the recent action against a particular company and Chinese individual is not just a pure judicial case but deliberate political suppression,” Wang said at a news conference on the sidelines of China’s annual parliament session.
“We have already and will continue to take all necessary steps, and resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese companies and citizens,” Wang said, without explaining what kind of measures Beijing would take.
Huawei announced on Thursday that it had filed a lawsuit in the US state of Texas to seek the reversal of legislation that prevents American federal agencies from buying its equipment and services.
Wang said China supports the company’s use of the “weapon of law to safeguard” its rights and not become a “silent lamb to the slaughter”.
Meng was arrested in Canada in December at the behest of the United States and this week a court set a May 8 date to start her extradition hearings.
Two Canadians were subsequently detained in China in suspected retaliation over Meng’s arrest, and the 15-year prison term of a third Canadian held on drug trafficking charges was switched to a death sentence.
Huawei campaign
Washington has warned that Huawei systems could be manipulated by Beijing to spy on other countries and disrupt critical communications, and is urging nations to shun the company in 5G networks.
Huawei is expected to play a key role in the coming rollout of ultra-fast 5G networks that will allow wide adoption of next-generation technologies like artificial intelligence.
The firm has responded to the pressure with an aggressive PR campaign in recent months, with Ren Zhengfei, its reclusive founder and Meng’s father, denying the claims in several foreign media interviews.
At a press conference announcing the lawsuit on Thursday, Huawei officials said the company had never received any request from Beijing to install security “backdoors” in its equipment or to gather intelligence.
Chief legal officer Song Liuping acknowledged Thursday that Chinese laws may require Huawei to heed government requests for assistance but said it would only do so in matters such as terrorism or criminal activity.
Huawei’s lawsuit targets an “unconstitutional exercise of executive and/or judicial power” that deprived it of a “fair hearing” to rebut allegations against it.
It also says the National Defense Authorization Act violates a bill of attainder clause by “singling out Huawei for punishment”.
© Agence France-Presse