US to ban Chinese surveillance giant Hikvision over 'Uighur abuses'

US to ban Chinese surveillance giant Hikvision over 'Uighur abuses'
Donald Trump's administration is considering banning two top Chinese surveillance firms Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology and Zhejiang Dahua Technology from buying US components, media have reported.
3 min read
23 May, 2019
The move will make it harder for Hikvision to access US market and suppliers [AFP]
Washington will ban two top Chinese surveillance firms from buying US components in the coming weeks, just days after as the backlisting of telecoms giant Huawei, according to media reports.

The move - over alleged human rights abuses - would make it harder for Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology and Zhejiang Dahua Technology to access the US market and suppliers, Bloomberg News cited people familiar with the matter as saying.

The action, first reported by The New York Times, would also likely exacerbate the US' worsening row with Beijing after President Donald Trump stopped US firms from selling to Huawei and barred it from the US market. Huawei has been given a 90-day reprieve.

Hikvision is the world's largest seller of surveillance equipment, employing 34,000 people worldwide. It has grown quickly as Beijing has expanded surveillance on its population and especially in its restive northwestern Xinjiang region.

The Uighur ethnic minority make up almost half of the region's 23-million-strong population and have been targeted with pervasive surveillance from cameras like those made by Hikvision, among other draconian security measures, following a flare-up in violence in 2014.

Chinese authorities have placed an estimated one million mostly Muslim ethnic minorities including Uighurs in internment camps, which Chinese authorities downplay as "vocational education centres".

Last year US lawmakers wrote to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin calling for sanctions on Chinese officials in charge of the region and on the two surveillance equipment manufacturers supplying equipment, Hikvision and Dahua.

"We have taken note of The New York Times' report this morning and hope our company receives fair and just treatment," said Hikvision board secretary Huang Fanghong.

"Hikvision is a product supplier, we have not done anything improper in Xinjiang, our company has not in the past, does not right now, and will not in the future take any business that has violating human rights as a requirement," Huang said on her WeChat social media account.

Asked about the reports, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang told reporters: "We have repeatedly stated China's opposition to the US' abuse of state power to wilfully smear and suppress enterprises of other countries, including Chinese enterprises."

Hikvision's controlling shareholder is state-owned China Electronics Technology HIK Group. 

As many as five Chinese surveillance hardware makers, including Hikvision and Dahua, could be added to the US Commerce Department entity list, Bloomberg News said.

The Commerce Department action against Huawei threatens to bar the company from using Google's Android software for its smartphones, remove US chips from its handset and telecoms gear, and could slow down the rollout of next generation 5G networks in parts of the world.

Agencies contributed to this report.

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