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Australia Bars Huawei From Broadband Project

ao333

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Australia has blocked Huawei Technologies of China from bidding on contracts in the $38 billion Australian National Broadband Network, citing security concerns, Huawei said Monday.

“We were informed by the government that there is no role for Huawei” in the network, said Jeremy Mitchell, a spokesman in Australia for Huawei, one of the world’s largest suppliers of telecommunications equipment.

The Australian plan is the largest infrastructure project in the country’s history. It is intended to connect 93 percent of homes and workplaces with fiber-optic cable, providing broadband service in urban and rural areas.

It was announced in 2009 by the Australian government with a committed investment of as much as $38 billion. The network is expected to be ready by 2020.

The Australian Financial Review newspaper said in a report Monday that Huawei had sought to secure a supply contract worth as much as 1 billion Australian dollars, or $1.05 billion, as part of the project, but had been blocked by the Australian attorney general on the basis of advice from the Australian Security Intelligence Organization.

The office of the attorney general said in a news release, “This is consistent with the government’s practice for ensuring the security and resilience of Australia’s critical infrastructure more broadly.”

The network is “a strategic and significant government investment,” the attorney general’s office told Bloomberg News. “We have a responsibility to do our utmost to protect its integrity and that of the information carried on it.”

The government declined to comment on its specific discussions with companies, which are confidential, the office said.

The security agency declined to comment on the report.

On the sidelines of a nuclear security summit meeting in South Korea, Prime Minister Julia Gillard of Australia said the government had made the correct decision.

“You would expect as a government that we make all of the prudent decisions to make sure that the infrastructure project does what we want it to do, and we’ve taken one of those decisions,” she said.

Huawei was founded by its chief executive, Ren Zhengfei, a former officer of the People’s Liberation Army in China. That has led to claims that it has too cozy a relationship with the Chinese government.

The company. based in Shenzhen, China, has been struggling to expand its business in the United States, which has blocked its equipment deals, citing national security concerns and allegations that Huawei had violated sanctions by supplying Iran with banned equipment.

“While we’re obviously disappointed by the decision,” the company said, referring to the Australian rejection, “Huawei will continue to be open and transparent and work to find ways of providing assurance around the security of our technology.”

Mr. Mitchell told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.: “We have never been told by the Chinese government to do a certain thing. If we would, that would be to our detriment, and we would lose the market share that we have.”

A former Australian foreign minister, Alexander Downer, who is an independent director on the board of Huawei’s Australian unit, rejected the government’s security concerns.

“This sort of whole concept of Huawei being involved in cyberwarfare, presumably that would just be based on the fact that the company comes from China,” he said on ABC Radio on Monday. “This is just completely absurd.”

Mr. Mitchell told Bloomberg that “the bar is set higher” for the company because of where it is from.

He said Huawei was working on eight broadband networks similar to the Australian plan in Benin, Britain, Brunei, Cameroon, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/27/t...ei-from-broadband-project.html?_r=1&ref=china

Communists...
 
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Was it not because the chap was in the Chinese Military before?
 
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good job,we cannot rule out that china will install backdoors in there equipnment to stole info from Australian servers,whole chinese defence industry thrives on stealing info and than make illegal copies of it.
 
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Was it not because the chap was in the Chinese Military before?

Correct.

ASIO (Australian Security Intelligence Organisation) our domestic spy agency banned Huawei because of certain connections this guy has and the company has.

We want to ensure the new national broadband network has no outside interference that could possibly disrupt the network in the future.

The full details as to why they were banned has not been released but it should be noted that ASIO doesn't make decisions like this lightly so there almost certainly is a good reason behind it.

Another company working on the Australian National Broadband Network has already been banned because they were found to be creating a backdoor switch that could turn off the network.
 
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china has the worlds most powerful super computers now and building more of them..
china can breach their broadband anythime at will.....
Australians doing what they do best...cheap show off popularity stunts and racism.
 
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no.1, 2 and 3 australian carriers been using huawei's equipments for years. why all the sudden security scares?? lol huawe's competitors must have bribe those politicians big time.

huawei just won another big contract from optus, ozzie second biggest carrier. no one is bitching?

huawei is also top seller in lte in europe. those guys don't seems to have any problem.. should be a lot of bs security excuses to block huawei, since chinese company beating their own champions in their own market.

seems like whoever offer the biggest bribe wins.

Optus picks Huawei to build 4G network
Lucy Battersby
March 14, 2012
*ttp://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/it-pro/business-it/optus-picks-huawei-to-build-4g-network-20120314-1uzke.html

Huawei beats Ericsson, Nokia to emerge as top European LTE base station equipment supplier
*ttp://news.telecomseva.com/index.php/2012/01/huawei-beats-ericsson-nokia-to-emerge-as-top-european-lte-base-station-equipment-supplier/

Huawei and ZTE to build 4G network for Japan
http://info.busiunion.com/11-9//8339.jsp]Huawei and ZTE to build 4G network for Japan,Help your business enter China, A huge chinese market is waiting for you !
 
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Australians doing what they do best...cheap show off popularity stunts and racism.

Why bother making such a silly comment?

Banning a company on grounds of national security doesn't win "popularity" and certainly doesn't have anything to do with racism.

Before replying, make sure you think about your comments before you make them.
 
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Australia is just protecting it's national security they must have valid reasons for this move which won't be revealed to the general public.
 
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Lol @ pakistano fanboys.

They outdo even Chinese and toss logic out of the window to prove their loyalty to their new benefactor....:lol:
 
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Australia benefits tremendously from the trade with China. And the growing China is main reason why Australia could be survived from GFC.Recent news indicates the economic relationship between Australia and China will be even closer in the future.

Check news: Australia's 30 billion dollar currency swap deal with China

This is a national project which the government aims to create Aussie jobs and rewards local companies like Telstra.

So far as I know, killing Indian students is kind of 'sport' for Aussie racists. And it is beyond me why some ‘patriotic' Indian here are so concerned about Aussie national security even though their people were 'slaughtered' there.
 
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either they got big bribe money from huawei competitors or they're just american lapdog doing what their uncle telling em what to do. all the big europen countries, japan and other asians don't seems to believe in this bs.
 
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either they got big bribe money from huawei competitors or they're just american lapdog doing what their uncle telling em what to do. all the big europen countries, japan and other asians don't seems to believe in this bs.

It's not either of them. It's purely on national security grounds.

Other Chinese companies are have tendered for NBN contracts and have had no problems.
 
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