Huawei Cuts Meetings With US, Sends US Workers Home

Huawei Cuts Meetings With US, Sends US Workers Home
A man stands outside a Huawei store in Beijing on May 20, 2019. (Ng Han Guan/AP)
The Associated Press
5/31/2019
Updated:
5/31/2019

BEIJING—The Financial Times reported on May 31 that tech giant Huawei has ordered its employees to cancel technical meetings with American contacts and has sent home numerous U.S. employees working at its Chinese headquarters.

The moves come amid growing U.S.-China tensions over trade and technology in which Huawei has been a main target.

The newspaper quoted Huawei’s chief strategy architect, Dang Wenshuan, as saying that American citizens working in R&D were repatriated two weeks ago, after the Chinese group and 68 affiliates were placed on the U.S. Commerce Department’s “Entity List,” which effectively bars American firms from selling technology to Huawei without government approval.

The FT said a workshop underway at Huawei at the time was “hastily disbanded, and American delegates were asked to remove their laptops, isolate their networks and leave the Huawei premises.”

It quoted Dang as saying that Huawei is also limiting interactions between its employees and American citizens.

Huawei declined to comment on the FT report.

China’s commerce ministry announced Friday that it will establish its own list of foreign enterprises, organizations and individuals it deems to be “unreliable entities”—a possible response to the U.S. blacklist.

Ministry spokesman Gao Feng said the specific measures to be taken against the entities will be announced at a later date.