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Huawei sues FCC over ban from rural US

Staff Writer
By Staff Writer, ITWeb
Johannesburg, 05 Dec 2019
Song Liuping, Huawei’s chief legal officer.
Song Liuping, Huawei’s chief legal officer.

Chinese telecoms giant Huawei today mounted a legal challenge to the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC), seeking the court to overturn an unlawful order passed by the FCC on 22 November.

The order bans carriers in rural America from tapping the Universal Service Fund (USF) to purchase Huawei equipment.

In a petition filed in the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, Huawei asks the court to hold the FCC’s order unlawful on the grounds that it fails to offer Huawei required due process protections in labelling Huawei as a national security threat.

Huawei says it believes the FCC also fails to substantiate its arbitrary findings with evidence or sound reasoning or analysis, in violation of the US constitution, the Administrative Procedure Act, and other laws.

“Banning a company like Huawei, just because we started in China – this does not solve cyber security challenges,” Huawei’s chief legal officer Dr Song Liuping said at a press conference.

Song said both FCC chairman, Ajit Pai, and other FCC commissioners failed to present any evidence to prove their claim that Huawei constitutes a security threat, and ignored the facts and objections raised by Huawei and rural carriers after the FCC first made the proposal in March, 2018.

“Huawei also submitted 21 rounds of detailed comments, explaining how the order will harm people and businesses in remote areas. The FCC ignored them all,” he said.

“Carriers across rural America, in small towns in Montana, Kentucky, and farms in Wyoming – they choose to work with Huawei because they respect the quality and integrity of our equipment,” Song added. “The FCC should not shut down joint efforts to connect rural communities in the US.”

Glen Nager, Huawei’s lead counsel for the legal action, said the FCC has simply adopted a standard-less rule that, by its own admission, was designed with only Huawei and another Chinese company in mind.

In addition, Nager said the decision adopted by FCC exceeds the agency’s “statutory authority,” as the FCC is not authorised to make national security judgements or to restrict the use of USF funds based on such judgements.

“Indeed, the commission has no national security expertise or authority.”

According to Nager, FCC’s designation of Huawei as national security threat lacks legal or factual support.

“The designation is based on a fundamental misunderstanding of Chinese law and on unsound, unreliable, and inadmissible accusations and innuendo, not evidence. The designation is simply shameful prejudgment of the worst kind,” he said.

Karl Song, vice president of Huawei’s corporate communications department, said the FCC rule is threatening the improving connectivity in rural America, which depends on Huawei equipment because other vendors were not willing to do business in places “that were too remote, or where the terrain was difficult, or where there just wasn’t a large population.”

He added that the ban and the following “rip-and-replace” proposal would cost hundreds of millions of dollars and even force some small carriers to go bankrupt.

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