German government to consult further before taking
Huawei decision: source
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[February 12, 2019]
BERLIN (Reuters) - The German government
will consult further with telecoms operators and vendors before deciding
whether to let Chinese firms such as Huawei Technologies participate in
building future 5G mobile networks, a senior source said.
A decision is unlikely within the next two weeks, the source added,
after ministers discussed the matter last week against a backdrop of
U.S. calls on its European allies to exclude Chinese vendors on national
security grounds.
Some government and industry leaders have been hoping to achieve clarity
on the ground rules for 5G before Germany fires the starting gun on the
buildout of next-generation networks by auctioning spectrum in late
March.
Work still needs to be done to address costs, feasibility and security
measures, said the source, pushing back against reporting in the German
business press that officials had hammered out a common approach.
Chancellor Angela Merkel has said Germany needs guarantees that Huawei
would not hand data to the Chinese state before it can take part in
building fifth-generation networks that would link everything from
vehicles to factories at far greater speeds.
Huawei, the global networks market leader with annual sales exceeding
$100 billion, faces international scrutiny over its ties with the
Chinese government and suspicion Beijing could use its technology for
spying, which the company denies.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo drove home that message in Budapest
on Monday, cautioning allies in central Europe that deploying equipment
from Huawei would make it more difficult for Washington "to partner
alongside them".
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The Huawei booth is
pictured at the sponsors' area during the Christian Democratic Union
(CDU) party congress in Hamburg, Germany, December 7, 2018.
REUTERS/Andreas Rinke/File Photo
Germany's three telecoms operators - Deutsche Telekom, Vodafone and Telefonica
Deutschland - use Huawei equipment in their networks and have warned that
curbing their choice of vendors could be costly.
Deutsche Telekom has, for its part, proposed a series of technical and
compliance measures to safeguard security, including setting up an independent
laboratory to scrutinize all equipment used in critical infrastructure before it
is deployed in the field.
It also called for network equipment makers to submit the source code that runs
their equipment to a trusted third party. Under certain circumstances, an
operator would be able to gain access to address any security vulnerabilities.
Further, it said legal obligations and liability for the security of critical
infrastructure should be broadened to cover network vendors in addition to
operators, as is the case now.
(Reporting by Andreas Rinke and Nadine Schimroszik; Writing by Douglas Busvine;
Editing by Keith Weir)
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