The US government has urged
its allies to exclude the Chinese telecoms giant from the West's
next-generation communications, saying Beijing could use it for spying. Huawei
has denied the charges.
The head of the French cybersecurity agency ANSSI said there would not be a total ban on using equipment from Huawei in the rollout of the French 5G telecoms network, but that it was pushing French telcos to avoid switching to the Chinese company.
"What I can say is
that there won't be a total ban," Guillaume Poupard told Les Echos
newspaper in an interview. "(But) for operators that are not currently
using Huawei, we are inciting them not to go for it."
The US government has urged
its allies to exclude the Chinese telecoms giant from the West's
next-generation communications, saying Beijing could use it for spying. Huawei
has denied the charges.
Sources told Reuters in
March France would not ban Huawei but would seek to keep it out of the core
mobile network, which carries higher surveillance risks because it processes
sensitive information such as customers' personal data.
France's decision over
Huawei's equipment is crucial for two of the country's four telecoms operators,
Bouygues Telecom and SFR, as about half of their current mobile network is made
by the Chinese group.
"For those that are
already using Huawei, we are delivering authorisations for durations that vary
between three and eight years," Poupard said in the interview.
State-controlled Orange has
already chosen Huawei's European rivals Nokia and Ericsson.
Poupard said that from next
week, operators which have not received an explicit authorisation to use Huawei
equipment for the 5G network can consider a non-response after the legal
deadline as a rejection of their requests.
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