logo
Huawei's paradox in Spain: No to 5G, yes to wiretaps

Huawei's paradox in Spain: No to 5G, yes to wiretaps

Euronews16 hours ago
The Spanish Interior Ministry contracts worth €12.3 million to Chinese tech firm Huawei for the management of the storage of judicial wiretaps.
The decision is part of the centralised tenders agreement between 2021 and 2025 and includes the digital custody of interceptions ordered by judges and prosecutors, such as, for example, the Villarejo audios or those provided by the Central Operational Unit (UCO) in the Koldo corruption case.
The system used, according to Spanish media outlet 'The Objective', is the Huawei OceanStor 6800 V5, a line of high-performance storage servers that serves as a support to preserve and classify communications legally intercepted by state security forces.
The award was processed following the established public procedures and complies with the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) security guidelines of the National Cryptologic Centre (CCN-STIC).
This is not the first time that Huawei has participated in sensitive Spanish systems. The Asian company has already provided technological support within the legal interception systems (SITEL), which has generated growing unease in sectors of the National Police and the Civil Guard.
Internal sources inboth bodies express their concern at what they consider to be a "strategic incongruity" in security matters: while extreme caution is being exercised with foreign programmes, critical data is being entrusted to a company linked to the Chinese Communist Party.
The OceanStor model acquired by Spain is a high-end enterprise storage system, designed to manage large volumes of data with high availability. Its main competitive advantage is that it is cheaper than its Western competitors such as Dell EMC, IBM and Hitachi, which has favoured its expansion in several countries.
European veto and international pressures
The Spanish position contrasts sharply with the European and Western trend. The European Union has intensified pressure on Spain to tighten its regulations against Chinese suppliers following the pact reached by Germany to progressively dismantle Huawei and ZTE's infrastructures.
Germany reached an agreement with its main operators (Deutsche Telekom, Telefónica and Vodafone) to phase out these high-risk components. The German regulation sets a replacement schedule that calls for a review of "critical software components" by the end of 2026 and a replacement of "critical functions" by the end of 2029.
This German strategy follows that adopted by Portugal, which in June placed bans on all non-EU, NATO and OECD suppliers. Portugal did not block specific companies, but entire nationalities in order to safeguard its networks against security risks.
In the EU as a whole, ten countries have already imposed restrictions. The UK and Sweden directly banned Chinese suppliers from their core 5G networks, while France, without making a public list, has excluded all Chinese suppliers from its local companies' networks.
Washington and Brussels have been blunt in their stance. Since the Trump era, the US administration has maintained a total veto on Huawei's participation in telecommunications networks. In 2020, the European Commission recommended that its member states exclude "high-risk" providers from 5G deployments.
The current state of play in Spain: de facto veto without explicit prohibition
Despite the Spanish government's official reluctance to specifically target companies such as Huawei or countries such as China, the reality of the Spanish market has changed dramatically. Telefónica has awarded Nokia the last part of its 5G core, completing the removal of Huawei from critical Spanish networks.
This move culminates the unofficial banishment of the Chinese giant from critical telecoms infrastructure in Spain, without the need for an explicit government veto. In 2019, Telefónica had chosen Huawei for its 5G core, but international pressures forced an immediate change of course.
The current situation for Spain's big three operators is clear: all have ousted Huawei from their network cores. Telefónica split it between Nokia and Ericsson, Orange awarded it to Ericsson, and Vodafone chose Nokia. Huawei's presence in the 5G cores of the big three Spanish operators has been reduced to 0%.
Huawei's exit from the Spanish market has been accelerated not only by corporate decisions but also by public policy. Although it maintains a significant presence in the radio networks of some operators (such as 70% in Vodafone), its exclusion from public support for rural 5G through an indirect veto has been decisive.
This government strategy, which requires avoiding "high-risk suppliers" in order to access public funds, led Huawei to file a lawsuit before the Audiencia Nacional. The replacement process requires caution and precision, following a meticulous schedule by phases and regions to avoid service interruptions.
A paradox reflecting geopolitical tensions
The Spanish case with Huawei has become an example of how geopolitics changes the technological map of a country without the need for outright bans. While the 5G network core, the brain that manages all user connections and data, is considered critical infrastructure for national security, paradoxically, trust in the Chinese company to manage judicial wiretapping is maintained.
The Minister of Digital Transformation, José Luis Escrivá, said in a statement to 'The Objective' that Spain has no plans to draw up a list of high-risk suppliers, a prerogative included in the 5G cybersecurity law that two years later has not been developed. This position has a twofold objective: not to single out Chinese suppliers and to maintain a "silver bullet" to act if the geopolitical situation worsens.
Diplomatic rapprochement has also been visible. Spain and China have redoubled their cooperation following the landing of electric car manufacturer Chery in Barcelona and with MG sounding out Galicia to set up in Europe. The Spanish government does not want to undermine these investments by targeting Beijing's main technology companies.
Pedro Sánchez has been, within the EU, one of the most favourable leaders to Huawei's presence, publicly defending that the company should not be excluded because of its country of origin. This position contrasts with the pressure that Brussels has been exerting on Spain over the last two years, without any visible effect.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EU trade ministers to mull US tariffs as Germany's Merz cautions calm
EU trade ministers to mull US tariffs as Germany's Merz cautions calm

Euronews

timean hour ago

  • Euronews

EU trade ministers to mull US tariffs as Germany's Merz cautions calm

EU trade ministers meet in Brussels on Monday after US President Donald Trump declared 30% tariffs on the EU will start 1 August, meanwhile German leaders joined other European leaders on Sunday advising a calm approach to the continuing trade negotiations. The ministers will meet to discuss trade with the US and China during the first of a two-day Foreign Affairs Council convening in the Belgian capital. On Saturday, US President Donald Trump posted a new set of letters to his social media platform Truth Social, making the 30% declaration in respect of the EU and Mexico, a move that could cause massive upheaval between the United States and two of its biggest trade partners. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen quickly responded by noting the bloc's 'commitment to dialogue, stability, and a constructive transatlantic partnership.' "We have always been very clear that we prefer a negotiated solution. This remains the case, and we will use the time that we have now till the 1st of August," she said during a press conference on Sunday. "We've prepared for this, and we can respond with countermeasures if necessary." Von der Leyen also said that the the EU will suspend retaliatory tariffs on US goods scheduled to take effect Monday in hopes of reaching a trade deal with the Trump administration by the end of the month. German chancellor Friedrich Merz adopted a sanguine tone in the media telling national broadcaster ARD on Sunday that he had spoken to von der Leyen, French President Emmanuel Macron and Trump on Friday and they agreed to attempt seeking a deal over the next two weeks. Merz said negotiations were advanced and underlined that other countries that have received similar letters – including China and Canada - have usually found reasonable solutions. 'Nobody needs new threats or provocations right now. What we need is for the EU to continue serious and focused talks with the US,' the country's finance minister, Lars Klingbeil, told Germany's Süddeutsche Zeitung. Other European leaders joined von der Leyen in urging Trump to give negotiations more time and warnings of possible new tariffs on Washington. 'With European unity, it is more than ever up to the Commission to assert the Union's determination to resolutely defend European interests,' French President Emmanuel Macron said in a statement posted on X. Italy's Meloni cautions not to trigger a trade war Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's office said "it would make no sense to trigger a trade war between the two sides of the Atlantic." Danish Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen told broadcaster DR that Trump was taking a 'pointless and a very shortsighted approach." Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson warned in an interview with the country's public broadcaster SVT that 'everyone loses out from an escalated trade conflict, and it will be US consumers who pay the highest price.' Outgoing Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof wrote on X that the announcement "is concerning and not the way forward." Irish Taoiseach Micheal Martin said on Saturday that the tariffs represent a "setback", adding that levies are "not sustainable and tenable". During his remarks, Martin also mentioned that the European Union has countermeasures on the table, but "it doesn't want to have to deploy and would prefer a negotiated approach".

Trump to meet Rutte as plan takes shape for Ukraine weapons sale
Trump to meet Rutte as plan takes shape for Ukraine weapons sale

Euronews

time4 hours ago

  • Euronews

Trump to meet Rutte as plan takes shape for Ukraine weapons sale

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte is set to meet with US President Donald Trump this week after the US leader announced plans to sell advanced weaponry to NATO allies for eventual transfer to Ukraine. Rutte will be in Washington on Monday and Tuesday for talks with Trump, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth and members of Congress. 'I'm gonna have a meeting with the secretary general who's coming in tomorrow,' Trump told reporters in Washington on Sunday night. 'But we basically are going to send them various pieces of very sophisticated (weapons) and they're gonna pay us 100% for them.' The Rutte visit comes after Trump last week teased that he would make a 'major statement' on Russia on Monday and as Ukraine struggles to repel massive air assaults launched by Russian forces. Trump on Sunday declined to give further details on the announcement, saying: 'We're going to see what we will see tomorrow.' A close Trump ally, Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, said on Sunday that the war in Ukraine is approaching a critical turning point as Trump signals renewed interest in helping Kyiv's repel Russia's ongoing full-scale invasion. "In the coming days, you'll see weapons flowing at a record level to help Ukraine defend themselves,' Graham said, 'One of the biggest miscalculations (Russian President Vladimir) Putin has made is to play Trump. And you just watch, in the coming days and weeks, there's going to be a massive effort to get Putin to the table.' Rubio said on Friday that some of the US-made weapons Ukraine is seeking are deployed with NATO allies in Europe. Those weapons could be more quickly transferred to Ukraine, with European countries buying replacements from the US, according to him. Trump is also facing calls from both sides of the US political spectrum as well as allies in Europe to support legislation which would aim to cripple Russia's oil industry and hit Moscow with more US sanctions. The legislation would partially call for a 500% tariff on goods imported from countries that continue to buy Russian oil, gas, uranium and other exports. It would massively impact the economies of Brazil, China and India, which account for most of Russia's energy trade. That revenue is critical to keeping Putin's war machine humming as the US and Europe have imposed significant import and export bans on a wide range of goods to and from Russia.

Zalando takes majority stake in About You, targets 8% EBIT margin
Zalando takes majority stake in About You, targets 8% EBIT margin

Fashion Network

time6 hours ago

  • Fashion Network

Zalando takes majority stake in About You, targets 8% EBIT margin

Zalando and About You, two of Europe's leading online fashion platforms, have officially merged in a strategic move to unite their B2C and B2B strengths. While combining forces to accelerate growth across the region, both companies will retain distinct brand identities. Zalando will unveil the first outlook for the newly formed group on August 6, alongside its second-quarter earnings for fiscal year 2025. The European Commission approved the deal on July 1, including Zalando's voluntary public takeover offer to About You shareholders. Zalando has now acquired 91.45% of the former Otto Group subsidiary's share capital. As a next step, Zalando intends to initiate a squeeze-out of remaining minority shareholders, offering them fair cash compensation. The squeeze-out will occur through a merger between About You and a wholly owned Zalando subsidiary. Since announcing the planned merger on December 11, 2024, both companies say they've been preparing for this next phase—developing concrete plans to ensure a smooth transition post-merger. 'Zalando and About You both started as local startups and have grown into European success stories,' said Robert Gentz, Zalando's co-CEO and co-founder. 'We share a deep focus on quality, innovation, and staying close to our customers. Together, we'll be a powerhouse shaping the future of fashion and lifestyle e-commerce in Europe.' On the B2C side, the group plans to deliver differentiated and engaging shopping experiences for both customers and brands. In B2B, the integration of About You's payment solution Scayle complements Zalando's vision of building a full-scale operating system for the fashion and lifestyle sector. 'By combining our complementary logistics and software tools—Zeos, Tradebyte, and Scayle—we're creating an even more robust e-commerce operating system,' the companies stated. 'This will allow brands and retailers to efficiently manage multichannel businesses across Europe and beyond.' 'At the heart of this partnership is our shared mission to redefine how people shop for fashion and lifestyle products—and to bring real value to our customers and partners,' said Tarek Müller, co-CEO and co-founder of About You. Gentz added, 'This strategic transaction unlocks major collaborative opportunities while allowing About You to retain its identity and entrepreneurial energy.' Back in December 2024, Zalando reaffirmed its mid-term outlook for the combined group. By 2028, the company expects compound annual growth of 5 to 10 percent in both gross merchandise volume (GMV) and revenue. The merged entity is also targeting an adjusted EBIT margin of 6 to 8 percent—representing a significant boost in absolute earnings. Together, the companies aim to capture a larger share of Europe's €450 billion fashion and lifestyle market.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store