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Huawei CFO raises new argument to fight U.S. extradition in Canada court

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Huawei CFO raises new argument to fight U.S. extradition in Canada court

By Tessa Vikander and Karen Freifeld

 

2020-06-16T003547Z_2_LYNXMPEG5F00H_RTROPTP_4_USA-HUAWEI-TECH-CANADA.JPG

FILE PHOTO: Huawei Technologies Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou leaves her home to attend a court hearing in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada May 27, 2020. REUTERS/Jennifer Gauthier

 

VANCOUVER/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou is raising a new argument in a Canadian court in a bid to fight extradition to the United States on bank fraud charges, court documents released on Monday showed.

 

Meng's lawyers claim the case that the United States submitted to Canada is "so replete with intentional and reckless error" that it violates her rights.

 

Meng, 48, was detained in Vancouver on Dec. 1, 2018, at the request of the United States, where she is charged with bank fraud and accused of misleading HSBC Holdings Plc <HSBA.L> about Huawei Technologies Co Ltd's business in Iran.

 

Meng, the daughter of billionaire Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei, has said she is innocent and is fighting extradition.

 

The arrest has strained China's relations with both the United States and Canada.

 

A PowerPoint presentation that Meng gave to a HSBC banker in Hong Kong in 2013 has been cited as key evidence against her.

 

In that presentation, Meng said that Skycom Tech Co Ltd - a firm that operated in Iran - was "a business partner of Huawei," while the United States has described it as an unofficial subsidiary.

 

Meng's lawyers argued the prosecutors omitted key disclosures Meng made in the presentation regarding Huawei's ongoing business operations in Iran and that Skycom worked with Huawei in sales and service in Iran.

 

Without those disclosures, the lawyers said, the U.S. summary of the PowerPoint was "materially misleading."

 

Meng's lawyers also pointed out that the case said only "junior" HSBC employees knew of the relationship between Huawei and Skycom. Meng's lawyers said it is implausible that HSBC senior management was unaware of the relationship, given Huawei was one of HSBC's biggest clients.

 

The lawyers also said that a $900 million credit facility that the United States said HSBC had extended to Huawei did not exist. Rather Huawei was in a $1.6 billion credit arrangement with 26 banks, and HSBC's total contribution was limited to $80 million, they argued.

 

In addition, the lawyers said, the credit facility was never drawn on by Huawei and was canceled in June 2017.

 

Assistant Chief Justice Heather Holmes of British Columbia Supreme Court said in a case conference on Monday that she wanted to be fully apprised of the U.S. case before turning to Meng's claims that her rights were violated when she was arrested.

 

A spokesman for U.S. prosecutors declined to comment. HSBC did not respond immediately. A spokeswoman for Canadian Justice minister declined to comment as the case remains before the courts.

 

Last month, a Canadian judge allowed the extradition case to continue, rejecting defense arguments that the U.S. charges against Meng do not constitute crimes in Canada.

 

(Reporting by Karen Freifeld in New York and Tessa Vikander in Vancouver; Additional reporting by Moira Warburton in Toronto and David Ljunggren in Ottawa; Editing by Denny Thomas and Cynthia Osterman)

 

reuters_logo.jpg

-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-06-16
 
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The US found itself way, way behind the technological curve, when it comes to 5G. The technology in the US sucks. It is spectacularly inferior. So, they needed to try to slow down the world leader in 5G. This is all about politics and industrial might, and has nothing to do with espionage, would be my guess. That sounds like something the US would make up, and my guess is that most Americans are buying into the stink. 

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12 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

The US found itself way, way behind the technological curve, when it comes to 5G. The technology in the US sucks. It is spectacularly inferior. So, they needed to try to slow down the world leader in 5G. This is all about politics and industrial might, and has nothing to do with espionage, would be my guess. That sounds like something the US would make up, and my guess is that most Americans are buying into the stink. 

I agree with you about some american technology being inferior, my company in the UK had to deisgn and build all the electrical hardware and controls for some of the largest American Water Treatment companies because their electrical equipment was 50 years behind the EU and B.S. standards. I could not believe it when i saw their first rejected containerised plant which had knife  switches!

US will never see 5G and possible not 6G and 7G mobile phones either...
Huawei alone has put more money in to R&D for 5G than all American tech companies put together, and that's why Huawei also has more essential patents for 5G than all American tech companies. That's why US is trying everything they can to stop Huawei and the Chinese technology wave that is hitting them... after 20-30 years of outsourcing everything to China?!

5 hours ago, Kasset Tak said:

US will never see 5G and possible not 6G and 7G mobile phones either...
Huawei alone has put more money in to R&D for 5G than all American tech companies put together, and that's why Huawei also has more essential patents for 5G than all American tech companies. That's why US is trying everything they can to stop Huawei and the Chinese technology wave that is hitting them... after 20-30 years of outsourcing everything to China?!

You know NOT what you are talking about, and what does this have to do with extradition hearing in Vanc. Canada?

 

Even S Korea has surpassed CN in 5G rollout/infrastructure.

 

5G-USA~https://www.t-mobile.com/devices/5g-phones

US has started 6G design, with deployment not before 2030.

Edited by i84teen

14 minutes ago, i84teen said:

You know NOT what you are talking about, and what does this have to do with extradition hearing in Vanc. Canada?

 

Even S Korea has surpassed CN in 5G rollout/infrastructure.

 

5G-USA~https://www.t-mobile.com/devices/5g-phones

US has started 6G design, with deployment not before 2030.

A matter of interest; just who in US is developing 6G. On record, I know that Hua Wei and NTT DoCoMo are developing 6G and probably Oulu in Finland. Can you name the corporation/s.

19 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

A matter of interest; just who in US is developing 6G. On record, I know that Hua Wei and NTT DoCoMo are developing 6G and probably Oulu in Finland. Can you name the corporation/s.

Who mentioned "corporations", except you. FYI, afaik (correct me if incorrect), Oulu is a university and Finnish constituency.

 

AND....the current state of 6G development (Core 6G Technologies) in US is ....r u ready...is
"Leading North American ICT companies"

 

I let you have the honors of naming some after you conclude your research.

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