Security

Poland may consider Huawei ban amid 'spy' arrests – reports

Chinese hardware biz faces more push-back in Western nations


A Polish official has said he couldn’t rule out “legislative changes” to allow the nation to ban the use of a company’s products, following the local arrest of a Huawei staffer.

The country’s internal security agency (Agencja Bezpieczeństwa Wewnętrznego, ABW) last week detained a man named by Polish media as Wang Weijing, a sales director at Huawei, on allegations of spying.

Soon after the arrest was made public, Huawei sought to distance itself by sacking the employee on the basis that the “incident has brought Huawei into disrepute”.

The Chinese-headquartered telecoms hardware maker has continually denied accusations its kit is being used by the Chinese government to spy on foreign nations, but the arrest in Poland marks a recent escalation of related concerns in the West.

This has seen the US, Australia and New Zealand implement official bans on using Huawei tech for state-funded 5G projects.

Poland now appears to be considering joining these nations – according to Reuters, the minister of digital affairs Karol Okonski floated the idea of a ban.

“We will analyze whether...our decision can include an end to the use...of Huawei products,” the official said of a potential review of Huawei's networking gear.

Okonski also suggested further, more broad steps: “We do not have the legal means to force private companies or citizens to stop using any IT company’s products. It cannot be ruled out that we will consider legislative changes that would allow such a move.”

Huawei has insisted that it "complies with all applicable laws and regulations in the countries where it operates, and we require every employee to abide by the laws and regulations in the countries where they are based". ®

Send us news
36 Comments

US lawmakers rage over Intel Meteor Lake-powered Huawei PC

Special export license granted to Intel by President Trump unlikely to be renewed

Huawei wants to take homegrown HarmonyOS phone platform worldwide

Chinese tech juggernaut eyes global expansion despite US tech restrictions

Where there's a will, there's Huawei to develop one's own chipmaking kit

Export restrictions and sanctions working well, we see

Intel fuels Huawei's AI PC ambitions with Meteor Lake CPUs in MateBook X Pro

But for how much longer?

iPhone sales dive 19.1% in China as Huawei comeback hits Apple in the high end

From first place to third as local brands grow

Huawei's latest flagship smartphone contains no world-shaking silicon surprises

Kirin 9010 SoC powering the Pura 70 is impressive, but doesn't indicate unforeseen prowess

China orders its telcos to rip and replace US chips with homegrown silicon by 2027

There's no Huawei we saw that coming

Huawei Cloud reveals the dynamic traffic allocation system it uses to cut bandwidth bills

Created during COVID to handle video boom and sliced bandwidth costs by 30 percent

Huawei's Iran sanctions evasion trial pushed to 2026

Meng Wanzhou is home, but the case is far from over

Huawei's cloud unit is its current growth vehicle

Big in China – and a presence elsewhere, but not at a scale to worry global hyperscalers

US may sanction those rumored to be in covert Huawei chip network

Crouching entity list candidate, hidden semiconductor ... or that's the idea, anyway

India’s homebrew RISC-V CPU goes on sale in new development board

Plus: Huawei’s tablets beat iPad sales; Japanese supermarket’s long ransomware fight; Do Kwon extradited