U.S. accuses Huawei of stealing trade secrets, assisting Iran
In the indictment, which supersedes one unsealed
last year in federal court in Brooklyn, New York, Huawei Technologies Co was
charged with conspiring to steal trade secrets from six U.S. technology
companies and to violate a racketeering law typically used to combat organized
crime.
It also contains new allegations about the company’s
involvement in countries subject to sanctions. Among other accusations, it says
Huawei installed surveillance equipment in Iran that was used to monitor,
identify, and detain protesters during the 2009 anti-government demonstrations
in Tehran.
The United States has been waging a campaign against
Huawei, which it has warned could spy on customers for Beijing. Washington
placed the company on a trade blacklist last year, citing national security
concerns.
The indictment is “part of an attempt to irrevocably
damage Huawei’s reputation and its business for reasons related to competition
rather than law enforcement,” Huawei said in a statement.
It called the racketeering accusation “a contrived
repackaging of a handful of civil allegations that are almost 20 years old.”
Huawei pleaded not guilty to the earlier indictment
unsealed against the company in January 2019, which charged it with bank and
wire fraud, violating sanctions against Iran, and obstructing justice.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang,
asked about the indictments during a daily briefing in Beijing on Friday, urged
the United States to immediately stop suppressing Chinese companies without
reason. Such acts seriously damage the United States’ credibility and image, he
said.
Its chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou was
arrested in December 2018 in Canada on charges in that indictment, causing an
uproar in China and a chill in Canadian-Chinese relations. She has said she is
innocent and is fighting extradition.
There are no new charges against Meng in the
superseding indictment.
The new trade secret theft charges relate to
internet router source code, cellular antenna technology, and robotics.
For example, beginning in 2000, Huawei and its
subsidiary Futurewei Technologies Inc are accused of misappropriating operating
system source code for internet routers, commands used to communicate with the
routers, and operating system manuals, from a company in Northern California.
Futurewei was added as a defendant in the latest indictment.
Huawei then sold their routers in the United States
as lower cost versions of the U.S. company’s products, the indictment says.
Although the U.S. company is not identified, Cisco
Systems sued Huawei in Texas in 2003 over copyright infringement related to its
routers.
Huawei is also accused of recruiting employees from
other companies, making efforts to get intellectual property from those
companies, and using professors at research institutions to obtain technology.
“The indictment paints a damning portrait of an
illegitimate organization that lacks any regard for the law,” U.S. Senate
Intelligence Committee chairman Richard Burr and vice chairman Mark Warner said
in a joint statement.
The Republican and Democratic Senators called it “an
important step in combating Huawei’s state-directed and criminal enterprise.”
Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou leaves
B.C. Supreme Court following her extradition hearing at B.C. Supreme Court in
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada January 23, 2020. REUTERS/Jennifer Gauthier
The indictment also accuses Meng and Huawei of
conspiring to defraud HSBC and other banks by misrepresenting Huawei’s
relationship with a company that operated in Iran.
It references reporting by Reuters from seven years
ago about Huawei’s ties to Skycom Tech Co Ltd, which offered to sell U.S.
origin goods to Iran, in violation of U.S. law. It also mentions news reports
in Reuters and the Wall Street Journal that claimed Huawei assisted the
government of Iran in domestic surveillance. reut.rs/2sUq8RT
In addition to accusing Huawei of lying about its
operations in Iran, the latest indictment says Huawei falsely represented to
banks that it had no business in North Korea.
The U.S. Commerce Department in May put Huawei on a
trade blacklist that restricted U.S. suppliers from selling parts and
components to the company.
On Thursday, in some positive news for the company,
the Commerce Department announced it was extending a temporary general license
for 45 days allowing U.S. companies to continue doing some business with
Huawei. The move is intended to maintain existing equipment and allow providers
in rural communities more time to find alternatives to the company’s networks.
At the same time, the United States is weighing new
regulations to stop more foreign shipments of products with U.S. technology to
Huawei.
And Washington has continued to pressure other
countries to drop Huawei from their cellular networks over its claim the
equipment could be used by Beijing for spying.