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Block China Mobile from US, FCC chairman says
by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) April 17, 2019

The chairman of the top US telecoms regulator on Wednesday announced his opposition to allowing China Mobile to operate in the United States, citing risks to American national security.

The statement from Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai could mark the beginning of the end for the Chinese telecoms giant's eight-year effort to crack the US market.

China Mobile -- the world's largest mobile operator with nearly 930 million customers as of February -- first filed an application for permission to operate in the United States in 2011.

Composed of Democrats and Republicans, the five-member FCC next month is due to vote on an order that, if approved, would deny China Mobile's request to operate.

"Safeguarding our communications networks is critical to our national security," Pai said in a statement.

Evidence, including that submitted by other federal agencies, Pai added, made it "clear that China Mobile's application to provide telecommunications services in our country raises substantial and serious national security and law enforcement risks."

Chinese tech firms -- such as Huawei and ZTE -- have faced stiff resistance from US government agencies, which have described them as security threats.

Washington has barred the Chinese networking equipment company Huawei from developing the new ultra-fast 5G mobile network in the United States and has blocked US government purchases of its services.

American officials have sought to persuade allied countries to do likewise.


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CYBER WARS
Russia sentences Norwegian charged with espionage to 14 years
Moscow (AFP) April 16, 2019
A Moscow court on Tuesday convicted a retired Norwegian border guard who was charged with spying on Russian nuclear submarines and sentenced him to 14 years in prison. Frode Berg, 63, was detained in Moscow in 2017 following a sting operation by Russia's FSB security service. A former Russian police officer was accused of handing Berg files on the Russian navy and given a 13-year prison term in December. Berg has admitted to acting several times as a courier for the Norwegian intelligence s ... read more

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