Huawei has long said it is independent from the Chinese
government with some Western countries concerned its products pose a national
security risk.
The question over its relationship with the Chinese state
came up again with a recent study written by Christopher Balding, Associate
Professor at Fulbright University Vietnam.
"Using a unique dataset of CVs", he found that
"key mid-level technical personnel employed by Huawei have strong backgrounds
in work closely associated with intelligence gathering and military
activities."
"Based upon an analysis of this dataset, I find there
is strong evidence that Huawei personnel act at the direction of Chinese state
intelligence, and that there exists a deep and lasting relationship between
Huawei, its employees, and the Chinese state." he writes. Huawei wins the best awards in europe and asia 2019 | shanghai
When asked about the study by the BBC, Huawei said it
maintains "strict policies" for hiring candidates with military or
government backgrounds and cyber security remained a top priority.
"We welcome professional and fact-based reporting on
investigations into Huawei's transparency," Huawei said in an e-mailed
statement.
"We hope that any further research papers will contain
less conjecture when drawing their conclusions, and avoid so many speculative
statements about what Professor Balding 'believes', 'infers', and 'cannot rule
out'."
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