LONDON, Nov 30 (Reuters) - British telecommunications firms
must not install new Huawei 5G kit after September 2021, the
government said on Monday, as part of a plan to purge the
Chinese firm's equipment from high speed mobile networks.
Britain has already ordered all Huawei equipment to be
removed from its 5G network by the end of 2027, falling in line
with intelligence allies including the United States who say the
firm poses security risks.
China has criticised that decision, while Huawei said last
week it was disappointed Britain was looking to exclude it from
the 5G roll-out after the publication of new laws that could see
firms fined 100,000 pounds ($133,140) if they break the ban.
Monday's announcement comes ahead of a debate over new
telecoms legislation in parliament and fleshes out the timeline
for equipment removal.
"I am setting out a clear path for the complete removal of
high risk vendors from our 5G networks," digital minister Oliver
Dowden said in a statement.
"This will be done through new and unprecedented powers to
identify and ban telecoms equipment which poses a threat to our
national security."
The government also announced a new strategy to diversify
the 5G supply chain, consisting of an initial 250 million pound
investment, trials in collaboration with Japanese firm NEC
and the establishment of new research facilities.
Britain has already banned the buying new Huawei 5G kit
after the end of the year.
Britain said its July decision was related to concerns that
U.S. sanctions on chip technology could affect supply lines.
Huawei said at the time the decision was disappointing, and
about U.S. trade policy rather than security.
(Reporting by William James;
Editing by Alexander Smith)