No decision on Huawei and 5G before fall federal election call: Goodale
OTTAWA — Canadians will have to wait until after this fall’s federal election to find out whether Chinese tech giant Huawei can provide equipment for the country’s next-generation 5G wireless network.
Canada needs more information from the United States about the nature of the potential security threat the U.S. believes the company poses, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale told The Canadian Press, and it likely won’t come before campaigning begins for the Oct. 21 election sometime in early September.
“I think at this stage, with the amount of time that’s left between now and the issuing of a writ, that it is unlikely for that decision to be taken before an election,” Goodale said Tuesday from London after a major meeting between Canada and its Five Eyes intelligence allies — the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand.
The meeting began with divisions over whether to let Huawei supply the equipment for the 5G system. The U.S. and Australia have banned the privately owned company, citing concerns that it is an organ of Chinese military intelligence — a charge the company denies, insisting it is wholly owned by its employees.