The United States and other western nations have called for a ban on Huawei’s devices due to security concerns, and now Germany is considering the same option of not utilising Huawei’s products for putting up its newest mobile phone network. Since various countries have warned against the use of Huawei equipment since it is a Chinese corporation and there have been claims that its networks have been used for surveillance and spying, Berlin is considering adopting strong security standards to secure its 5G networks. However, Huawei has fiercely disputed reports that its networks are being utilised by the Chinese government for spying purposes.
It’s clear that there is a huge market for a new wave of infrastructure change in mobile networks as countries around the world migrate from ageing 4G networks to 5G networks, and Huawei is widely recognised as the market leader in providing equipment for 5G networks at cheap costs. In recent years, governments have become leery of employing equipment made by Chinese enterprises due to many hacking events of government and private networks from sites in China, which caused serious disruptions in the work of vital institutions. Because of this, the United States, New Zealand, Australia, and Germany have all taken a hard position against Huawei.
As previously stated, Germany’s interior ministry had no choice but to prohibit Huawei due to the introduction of tough security rules, despite earlier statements to the contrary. When it comes to deploying 5G networks, both the UK and Canada are concerned about Huawei and are going to either replace their current equipment with newer models or to not use it at all. There is no rational reason for Huawei to be excluded from establishing 5G networks in any country around the world, and all the assertions that its networks were being used for espionage have been proven to be false.