China’s
Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, the telecoms equipment company whose
products are now integral to various mobile and fixed-line networks,
poses no threat to Britain’s national security, a board established to
monitor the company’s operations said.
The
world’s second largest telecoms equipment maker set up an independent
cyber security evaluation centre in Oxford in 2010 in conjunction with
the government to check whether its equipment could pose a threat to
national security.
The
company has been involved in Britain’s telecoms networks for a decade,
initially through a multi-billion pound deal to supply BT, the country’s
largest fixed-line operator, and later mobile service operators O2, EE
and Talktalk.
But
questions have been raised, in Britain and elsewhere, about the
potential security implications of allowing the Chinese company access
to critical networks.
British
lawmakers said in 2013 that Huawei, which was founded by Ren Zhengfei, a
former People’s Liberation Army officer, should have been scrutinised
more closely by ministers before it signed its first major deal with BT.
The
board set up to oversee the work of the centre, which includes
representatives from government, intelligence agencies, and the company,
said it was satisfied with the independence and quality of its tests.
“Any
risks to UK national security from Huawei’s involvement in the UK’s
critical networks have been sufficiently mitigated,” it said.
Huawei said the centre showed how governments, operators and equipment providers could work together on cyber security.
“In
the globalised, interconnected digital age, we must all work together
to deliver the best solutions to the challenges we face,” the company
said in a statement.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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