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Huawei Faces Mounting Opposition in UK as Distrust in Beijing Grows

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Spain Reaches 20,000 Deaths From the CCP Virus

Spain reported Saturday the country has reached 20,000 deaths from the CCP virus pandemic—a novel coronavirus that emerged from mainland China last year and caused a global pandemic. Health authorities reported 565 deaths in the last 24 hours. The total infections increased to more than 190,000. New infections rose by nearly 4,500. More than 74,000 people in Spain have recovered. As the outbreak’s spread slows, pressure on hospitals has relaxed. Authorities have closed one part of a huge field hospital with thousands of beds set up by the military in a convention center in Madrid. “The data of hospitalized, deceased, and ICU admissions have maintained a downward trend the past few days,” said health emergency chief Fernando Simón at a press briefing, adding that he hoped to see a steeper decrease…

Huawei Faces Mounting Opposition in UK as Distrust in Beijing Grows

Voices are growing within UK’s ruling party to block Chinese telecom giant Huawei from helping to build the country’s 5G network, as the government signals a tougher stance towards Beijing over its handling of the CCP virus pandemic.

The UK government in January granted Huawei a role in building non-sensitive parts of its next-generation wireless network, and capped its involvement at 35 percent. But since then, mounting opposition from within the ruling Conservative Party has raised doubts that the measure can raise enough votes to pass through parliament, Bloomberg reported. A bill formalizing January’s decision is expected to be introduced in the coming months.

The campaign against Huawei comes amid wider calls within the Tory Party for a reset of relations with China’s communist regime over its role in covering up the COVID-19 outbreak, which fueled the global spread of the virus.

“I think the government’s been misadvised,” Conservative Member of Parliament Owen Paterson told NTD, an affiliate of The Epoch Times. “I hope that events of recent weeks would have really woken them up to the danger, of being beholden on a company, which is so closely run by the Chinese communist government.”

The United States has warned the UK and other allies that Huawei’s equipment could be used by Beijing for espionage or to disrupt telecommunications networks. It cites the firm’s close ties to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), as well as Chinese law that compels companies to cooperate with intelligence agencies when asked.

Huawei has denied these allegations, and earlier this week posted an open letter urging for the UK not to take any steps to remove it from the nation’s 5G infrastructure.

Tom Tugendhat, the Conservative chairman of the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, also backs barring Huawei’s involvement in the UK’s networks.

“I think the mood in the parliamentary party has hardened,” Tugendhat told Bloomberg. “And I think it’s a shared realization of what it means for dependence on a business that is part of a state that does not share our values. That has become clearer.”

Former Tory leader and foreign secretary William Hague, who now sits in the House of Lords, earlier said that Britain can’t be dependent on China for technology as the recent crisis has demonstrated the ruling regime it doesn’t “play by our rules.”

A UK government spokesperson told NTD that the government’s position on Huawei hasn’t changed.

Earlier this week, Britain’s acting prime minister Dominic Raab said the country could not return to “business as usual” with the regime after the crisis.

“We’ll have to ask the hard questions about how it came about and how it could have been stopped earlier,” Raab said.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Friday that the regime’s failure to act appropriately during the COVID-19 pandemic will likely see countries rethink allowing their telecommunications infrastructure and 5G networks to be susceptible to control by the CCP, through Chinese companies like Huawei.

“When Huawei comes knocking to sell them equipment and hardware, that they will have a different prism through which to view that decision,” Pompeo told Fox Business Network.

Speaking of the fallout from the regime’s botched management of the outbreak, Paterson said: “I think all of this is very much going to change the image of China, with many members of Parliament, and there will absolutely be a rethink on our relationship with China.”

With reporting by Jane Werrell of NTD, an affiliate of The Epoch Times.

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Strong Earthquake Rattles Japanese Islands

A strong earthquake shook the Ogasawara Islands south of mainland Japan Saturday. The Japan Meteorological Agency initially said the quake measured 6.9 in magnitude. The agency later listed the magnitude as 6.0. The quake was centered in the Pacific Ocean, about 885 kilometers (550 miles) south of Shizouka, Japan, to the west of the Ogasawara Islands, which are also known as the Bonin Islands. The earthquake’s epicenter was 490 kilometers (305 miles) deep. There was no tsunami threat. There are no reports of damage or injuries. The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2020 Cable News Network, Inc., a WarnerMedia Company. All rights reserved. This article is from the Internet:Strong Earthquake Rattles Japanese Islands