Published: 11:28, July 10, 2020 | Updated: 22:42, June 5, 2023
Vodafone: Change in policy about Huawei would cost UK
By Xinhua

A photo shows the logo of Chinese company Huawei at their main UK offices in Reading, west of London on Jan 28, 2020. (PHOTO / AFP)

LONDON An "ultra aggressive imposition of a change in policy" concerning Huawei will hamper  Britain's economic recovery from the coronavirus crisis, an executive of telecoms operator Vodafone told British lawmakers on Thursday.

The British government announced in January its new plans to safeguard the country's telecoms network, which is widely seen as approving a restricted role for Huawei in helping build the country's 5G network.

But the government is reviewing the impact of the US restrictions on Huawei and will make a statement regarding the issue later this month, according to local media.

The British government announced in January its new plans to safeguard the country's telecoms network, which is widely seen as approving a restricted role for Huawei in helping build the country's 5G network

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Vodafone and BT are both leading telecoms operators in Britain and use Huawei equipment in their networks. Executives from these two companies told lawmakers that removing Huawei equipment from their networks in a short period of time will be costly and might lead to mobile phone signal blackouts.

Depending on how big or how intrusive the work to be carried out is, users would lose their signal, "sometimes for a couple of days", said Vodafone UK's head of technology Andrea Dona.

To get to zero in a three-year period, as proposed by some politicians, would literally mean "blackouts for customers on 4G and 2G, as well as 5G, throughout the country", said Howard Watson, BT's chief technology and information officer.

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The US Department of Commerce has announced that it will impose new restrictions on Huawei's acquisition of semiconductors that are the direct product of certain US software and technology.

In a recent statement, Victor Zhang, vice-president of Huawei, said: "We believe it is too early to determine the impact of the proposed restrictions, which are not about security, but about market position."

Huawei has said it "categorically opposes the amendments made by the US Department of Commerce to its foreign direct product rule that target Huawei specifically".