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Stop suppression of Huawei: China

Beijing has urged the U.S. to stop the “unreasonable suppression of Huawei and Chinese enterprises” after Washington announced new export controls to restrict the tech giant’s access to semiconductor technology.

The latest restrictions on the world’s second-largest smartphone manufacturer, which is at the centre of U.S. spying allegations, are a new escalation in the U.S.-China battle for global technological dominance.

“The Chinese government will firmly uphold Chinese firms’ legitimate and legal rights and interests,” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement Saturday. “We urge the U.S. side to immediately stop its unreasonable suppression of Huawei and Chinese enterprises.”

The Ministry said the Trump administration’s actions “destroy global manufacturing, supply and value chains”.

The U.S. Commerce Department said on Friday the controls would “narrowly and strategically target Huawei’s acquisition of semiconductors that are the direct product of certain U.S. software and technology.”

Espionage efforts

U.S. officials have repeatedly accused the Chinese technology giant of stealing American trade secrets and aiding China’s espionage efforts, ramping up tensions with the rival superpower while both sides were involved in a long-simmering trade war.

As a result, Huawei has increasingly relied on domestically manufactured technology, but the latest rules will also ban foreign firms that use U.S. technology from shipping semiconductors to Huawei without U.S. permission.

The new restrictions will cut off Huawei’s access to one of its major suppliers, the Taiwanese chipmaker TSMC, which also manufactures chips for Apple and other tech firms.

The U.S. last year banned Huawei from using U.S.-manufactured semiconductors in their products.

China has threatened retaliation against the U.S. for the move, including imposing restrictions on major U.S. firms and putting them on an “unreliable entity list”, according to a Global Times report. U.S. tech giants Apple, Cisco, Qualcomm and planemaker Boeing are among the firms that may be targeted, the report said.

U.S.-China relations are again on the rocks with Washington and Beijing trading barbs over the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Over the past week, China has also threatened retaliatory measures against the US for restricting the visa stay limits of Chinese journalists, and for several lawsuits filed by US lawmakers against China for the coronavirus pandemic.

—The Hindu

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