ADVERTISEMENT
Friday, June 12, 2026
No Result
View All Result
The AZB More Than Just News
  • HOME
  • Latest News
  • Business
  • PAKISTAN
  • SPORTS
  • WORLD
  • E-Paper
  • SCI-TECH
  • BANKING
  • ARTICLES
  • OPINION
  • MORE
    • MOBILE
    • TELECOM
    • PERSONALITY
    • HEALTH / EDUCATION
  • HOME
  • Latest News
  • Business
  • PAKISTAN
  • SPORTS
  • WORLD
  • E-Paper
  • SCI-TECH
  • BANKING
  • ARTICLES
  • OPINION
  • MORE
    • MOBILE
    • TELECOM
    • PERSONALITY
    • HEALTH / EDUCATION
No Result
View All Result
Daily The Azb
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT
Home Headline

Huawei Accused in Suit in Pakistan Project

News Desk by News Desk
August 15, 2021
Huawei Accused in Suit in Pakistan Project
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

ISLAMABAD – A long-running dispute between Huawei Technologies Co. and a small U.S.-based contractor has escalated to U.S. federal court, with the contractor alleging Huawei stole its technology and pressured it to build a “back door” into a sensitive law-enforcement project in Pakistan.

The contractor, Buena Park, Calif.-based Business Efficiency Solutions LLC, or BES, says in a lawsuit filed Wednesday in California district court that Huawei required it to set up a system in China that gives Huawei access to sensitive information about citizens and government officials from a safe-cities surveillance project in Pakistan’s second-largest city of Lahore.

Muhammad Kamran Khan, chief operating officer of the Punjab Safe Cities Authority, which oversees the Lahore project, said the authority has begun looking into BES’s allegations.

“Our team is examining the accusations and sought an explanation from Huawei,” Mr. Khan said in an interview. “We have also put a data security check on Huawei after this issue.”

“So far, there has been no evidence of any data stealing by Huawei,” he said.

A Huawei spokeswoman said the company doesn’t comment on ongoing legal cases. But she added, “Huawei respects the intellectual property of others, and there is no evidence Huawei ever implanted any back door in our products.”

In an Interview to international media, Huawei acknowledged setting up a separate version of the Lahore system in China, but said it was only a test version that was “physically isolated from the customer’s live network.” This made it “impossible for Huawei to extract data from the customer’s live network.”

Pakistan’s foreign ministry didn’t respond to requests for comment.

U.S. officials have long alleged Huawei gear could enable Chinese espionage in the countries that install it. Huawei has repeatedly said its gear is safe and that it would never spy on behalf of any government.

The allegations in the suit stem from a long-running legal dispute between the companies. Huawei hired BES to provide software and other services to help it win the rights to build Lahore’s safe-city project in 2016. It eventually beat out Western competitors including Motorola Solutions and Nokia Corp. with its bid of $150 million, according to the suit, in which BES is represented by lawyers from Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP.

The relationship soured, and Huawei sued BES in Pakistan, where BES also sued Huawei. Those proceedings are ongoing. BES is no longer operational and has no revenue.

Huawei is a leader in safe-cities projects—citywide surveillance systems marketed to governments as crime-fighting tools that often make use of facial-recognition cameras and other high-tech capabilities. The projects have drawn scrutiny from some governments and rights groups, who say they are used to export China’s surveillance practices. Huawei says its projects improve public safety and says it has built safe-cities systems in hundreds of cities around the world.

Pakistan has signed more agreements for Huawei safe-city projects than any other country, according to research by the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

BES’s lawsuit says that Huawei’s alleged back door was located in a database that consolidated sensitive information—including national ID card records, foreigner registrations, tax records and criminal records—for law enforcement. The system is called the Data Exchange System, or DES, according to the lawsuit.

BES says in the suit that after it installed the DES in Lahore, Huawei demanded in 2017 that it install a duplicate DES in the eastern Chinese city of Suzhou that would give Huawei direct access to the data being gathered in Pakistan.

Before building the Suzhou system, BES says in the suit it asked Huawei to obtain approval from Pakistani authorities.

“We want to ensure that PPIC3 has no objection in transfer of this technology outside of PPIC3 for security reasons,” Mr. Nawaz wrote in an email to Huawei officials attached to the lawsuit. “Please get an approval from PPIC3, in writing, prior to us performing this function.”

PPIC3 is the acronym for the Pakistani command center that oversees the Lahore project.

According to the lawsuit, Huawei initially said it wasn’t necessary to get approval for what it called a test and threatened to withhold payments and terminate its agreements with BES if the contractor didn’t build the system.

Later, the lawsuit says, Huawei told BES it had indeed received Pakistani approval, and BES went ahead with the installation in Suzhou.

Mr. Nawaz said in an interview that Huawei refused to show evidence of Pakistani approval and that BES installed the alleged back door under duress. The lawsuit alleges that “Huawei-China uses the proprietary DES system as a back door from China into Lahore to gain access, manipulate, and extract sensitive data important to Pakistan’s national security.”

Adrian Nish, the London-based head of threat intelligence at BAE Systems Applied Intelligence, a unit of BAE Systems PLC, said it isn’t uncommon for a vendor to build a duplicate version of a system in-house for testing while it is under development, but such duplicates shouldn’t be connected to the actual system.

“Those two systems should not talk to each other,” he said.

News Desk

News Desk

Welcome to our web desk! We're a dedicated team of digital enthusiasts passionate about delivering timely and engaging content to our online audience.

Related Posts

Walee Financial Services Launches “Khudmukhtar Khatoon” to Expand Shariah-Compliant Financing Access for Women Entrepreneurs Across Pakistan
Business

Walee Financial Services Launches “Khudmukhtar Khatoon” to Expand Shariah-Compliant Financing Access for Women Entrepreneurs Across Pakistan

June 12, 2026
Zong Launches 5G Desk at Karachi Airport with PAA Connectivity Boost
SCI-TECH

Zong Launches 5G Desk at Karachi Airport with PAA Connectivity Boost

June 11, 2026
Finance minister presents Economic Survey 2025-26 ahead of budget
Business

Finance minister presents Economic Survey 2025-26 ahead of budget

June 11, 2026
OpenAI reports Chinese influence attempts using ChatGPT in US political debates
SCI-TECH

OpenAI reports Chinese influence attempts using ChatGPT in US political debates

June 11, 2026
Canada digital safety law targets social media and AI chatbots for children under 16
SCI-TECH

Canada digital safety law targets social media and AI chatbots for children under 16

June 11, 2026
Meta Faces Major Social Media Lawsuits as Child Safety Cases Could Reshape Online Platforms Nationwide
SCI-TECH

Meta Faces Major Social Media Lawsuits as Child Safety Cases Could Reshape Online Platforms Nationwide

June 11, 2026
Donald Trump Orders New Iran Strikes as Middle East Conflict Escalates and Ceasefire Faces Fresh Pressure
Headline

Donald Trump Orders New Iran Strikes as Middle East Conflict Escalates and Ceasefire Faces Fresh Pressure

June 11, 2026
Trump Says China Agrees Iran ‘Cannot Have Nuclear Weapons’
Headline

Donald Trump faces backlash from National Iranian American Council over Iran war escalation as warnings intensify across Washington

June 11, 2026
Donald Trump Vows New Iran Strikes as Nuclear Deal Talks Face Growing Pressure
Headline

Donald Trump Vows New Iran Strikes as Nuclear Deal Talks Face Growing Pressure

June 11, 2026
Mastercard Releases Cyber Pulse Report Highlighting Rising Cybercrime Risks Across EEMEA Digital Economy
SCI-TECH

Mastercard Releases Cyber Pulse Report Highlighting Rising Cybercrime Risks Across EEMEA Digital Economy

June 11, 2026
Next Post
Rashid Rana a globally renowned artist Awarded Sitara-e-Imtiaz

Rashid Rana a globally renowned artist Awarded Sitara-e-Imtiaz

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Are you human? Please solve:Captcha


Most Popular

No Content Available

Must Read

Street Crime rate dropped down in Karachi: IGP
PAKISTAN

Street Crime rate dropped down in Karachi: IGP

July 24, 2018
Georgia Man Charged for Making Racially-Motivated Threats and Shooting at His Black Neighbor.
Headline

Georgia Man Charged for Making Racially-Motivated Threats and Shooting at His Black Neighbor.

October 27, 2023
The Azb is a 24/7 online news platform that covers a wide range of topics including business, economics, technology, finance, travel, fashion, and lifestyle.

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About us
  • SCI-TECH
  • Live TV
  • Banking

Useful Links

  • Videos
  • Reviews
  • Advertorial
  • Photos
  • About us
  • Author
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Partner
  • Privacy Policy
  • Russian Theatre Group Celebrates Fifth Anniversary in Pakistan.
  • Terms and Conditions
  • The Azb – More Than Just News
  • Contact

© Copyright 2024 theazb. All Rights Reserved.

Social Media Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • Latest News
  • Business
  • PAKISTAN
  • SPORTS
  • WORLD
  • E-Paper
  • SCI-TECH
  • BANKING
  • ARTICLES
  • OPINION
  • MORE
    • MOBILE
    • TELECOM
    • PERSONALITY
    • HEALTH / EDUCATION

© Copyright 2024 theazb. All Rights Reserved.