Australia's prevention and rejection of Huawei is extremely unfair

According to media reports recently, the Australian security department stated that Huawei is 'controlled by the Chinese government' and requested that the company be excluded from the scope of the tender. Previous reports from the Australian media also stated that the Australian government also prevented Huawei from participating in the Solomon Islands and Australia. Submarine cable laying, Solomon Islands has abandoned the agreement signed with Huawei, and has signed a separate contract with the Australian government.

This is another sign that the Australian side is on the rise of Chinese companies, especially Huawei's vigilance and exclusion.

Today, Huawei, a telecommunications equipment company in China, launched a counterattack on Australia’s remarks about Huawei’s security risks. In an open letter to the Australian government, it called this view “very one-sided.”

The Huawei Australia company letter stated that Huawei has operations in more than 170 countries in the world and has strictly complied with the laws and guidelines of each country. Huawei Australia also pointed out earlier this month that Huawei has so far met more than 55% of Australia. For 4G requirements, excluding Huawei from 5G will seriously affect Huawei's business in Australia. Obviously, rejecting Huawei will also greatly increase the cost of Australian telecom operators and allow consumers to bear higher 5G costs.

The single release of Huawei is to release Huawei’s signal to further exclude the Australian market. In today’s highly integrated era of hardware terminals and application software in the IT industry, Australia’s doing so will cause serious misconduct to Huawei and will also affect Australian consumers. Cause loss.

In fact, Huawei is a private company that has risen since China’s reform and opening up. The government has not participated in any shares in it. Its operations are not only highly independent, but also quite international. A large number of commercial and scientific elites from all countries in the world have participated in the development of the company. There is no difference between the assets and management culture of Huawei and other large multinational companies.

Today, what should Huawei do in the face of unfair treatment in Australia?

Applying the advice of Renhuai, the president of the next Huawei, to the new employee: Absolute fairness is not there. 'Birds that never die are the Phoenix'.

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