logo
Canada Orders Chinese Firm Hikvision To Cease Operations Citing National Security Concerns

Canada Orders Chinese Firm Hikvision To Cease Operations Citing National Security Concerns

News187 hours ago

Last Updated:
Canada's Industry Minister Melanie Joly said the government has decided that Hikvision's continued operations in Canada would be detrimental to Canada's national security.
In a significant development, the Canadian government has ordered Chinese video surveillance camera-making company Hikvision to halt all operations in the country and close its Canadian business over national security concerns.
Canada's Industry Minister, Melanie Joly, said the government has determined that Hikvision Canada's continued operations would be detrimental to Canada's national security. 'Following a National Security Review under the Investment Canada Act, the Government of Canada has ordered Hikvision Canada Inc. to cease all operations in Canada and close its Canadian business," she said in a statement.
Joly said this determination was a result of a multi-step review that assessed information and evidence provided by Canada's security and intelligence community. She also said Canada was prohibiting the purchase or use of Hikvision products in government departments, agencies and crown corporations.
My statement on Hikvision Canada Inc. following a national security review under the Investment Canada Act: pic.twitter.com/Gvl6aWRxyQ — Mélanie Joly (@melaniejoly) June 28, 2025
'The scope of this National Security Review under the Investment Canada Act does not extend to Hikvision's affiliate operations outside of Canada," she said, while encouraging Canadians to take note of this decision and make their own decisions accordingly.
'The Government of Canada is further conducting a review of existing properties to ensure that legacy Hikvision products are not used going forward. The Government of Canada welcomes foreign investment – but will never compromise on Canada's national security," she added.
Hikvision's Canadian and US operations, the parent company and China's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The company, which calls itself the world's biggest maker of video surveillance equipment, said last year it had exited contracts in Xinjiang through five subsidiaries that were added to a US trade black list in 2023.
Last year, the Wall Street Journal reported that Canada was reviewing an application to impose sanctions on four Chinese surveillance-gear companies, including Hikvision, over their alleged role in human-rights violations in Xinjiang.
(with agency inputs)
First Published:
June 28, 2025, 09:01 IST

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump has struck trade deals with 2 countries ahead of July 9; what about the others? What is India's position?
Trump has struck trade deals with 2 countries ahead of July 9; what about the others? What is India's position?

Mint

time33 minutes ago

  • Mint

Trump has struck trade deals with 2 countries ahead of July 9; what about the others? What is India's position?

As the July 9 deadline set by the Donald Trump administration approaches soon, officials have struggled to strike trade deals with a lot of countries. In almost three months, the US has been able to sign trade agreements with just two countries, with Trump and his officials hinting that a long pipeline is in place. Countries failing to strike deals with the US within the July 9 deadline will face tariffs as was announced by Trump in April. The President however on Friday indicated that the deadline could be moved forward. 'We can do whatever we want. We could extend it. We could make it shorter. I'd like to make it shorter. I'd like to just send letters out to everybody: Congratulations, you're paying 25 per cent,' he told reporters at the White House. Here's what you need to know about Donald Trump's trade deals. As of now, only two countries — China and UK — have signed trade deals with the US. 'The [Trump] administration and China agreed to an additional understanding for a framework to implement the Geneva agreement,' a White House official said on Thursday. That followed the talks in Geneva in May, where the US and China had agreed to reduce mutual tariffs. US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told Bloomberg TV on Thursday that 'they [China] are going to deliver rare earths to us', and once Beijing does that 'we'll take down our countermeasures'. Trump signed an agreement on June 16, formally lowering some tariffs on imports from Britain as the countries continue working toward a formal trade deal. The deal, announced by Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on the sidelines of the G7 Summit in Canada, reaffirmed quotas and tariff rates on British automobiles and eliminated tariffs on the U.K. aerospace sector, but the issue of steel and aluminum remains unresolved. While UK and China are the only countries that have signed trade deals with the US, Trump on Friday called off discussions with China, calling it a 'difficult country'. Trump abruptly ended the negotiations over its tax targeting US technology firms, saying that it was a "blatant attack" and that he would set a new tariff rate on Canadian goods within the next week. Majority of the trade partners of US, including South Korea, Vietnam and EU countries, are struggling to sign deals with America. Countries like France have rejected the notion of striking a deal that favours the US, and have proposed removal of tariffs altogether. Some EU member states have also rejected the idea of a tit-for-tat tarif, and are preferring a quick deal to a perfect one. India and Japan are considered to be the next countries that could strike trade deals with the US. 'But some of the bigger countries, India, I think we're going to reach a deal where we have the right to go in and trade. Right now, it's restricted. You can't walk in there. You can't even think about it,' Trump told reporters on Friday.

US 'immediately' cutting off trade talks with Canada: Trump
US 'immediately' cutting off trade talks with Canada: Trump

Fibre2Fashion

timean hour ago

  • Fibre2Fashion

US 'immediately' cutting off trade talks with Canada: Trump

US President Donald Trump has said he is 'immediately' cutting off trade talks with Canada as the latter has unveiled a 3-per cent digital services tax on major US tech firms. The Canadian tax will take effect on June 30. Terming Canada 'a very difficult country to trade with' on Truth Social, Trump denounced the Canadian decision as 'a direct and blatant attack on our country.' US President Donald Trump has said he is 'immediately' cutting off trade talks with Canada as the latter has unveiled a 3-per cent tax on major US tech firms. Terming Canada 'a very difficult country to trade with' on Truth Social, Trump denounced the Canadian decision as “a direct and blatant attack on our country.” He declared that he would determine and impose appropriate tariffs within a week. 'Based on this egregious Tax, we are hereby terminating ALL discussions on Trade with Canada, effective immediately,' he wrote. He declared that he would determine and impose appropriate tariffs within a week. Speaking from the White House, Trump said: 'They did something with our tech companies today trying to copy Europe. It's not going to work out well for Europe either. And it's not going to work out well for Canada. They were foolish to do it,' he said. Asked if Canada could reverse his decision, Trump responded, 'No… It doesn't matter to me. We have all the cards.' Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, however, downplayed the issue, saying, 'We will continue to conduct these complex negotiations in the best interests of Canadians. It's a negotiation.' Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)

Alibaba unveils latest AI service for images in push for users
Alibaba unveils latest AI service for images in push for users

Time of India

time2 hours ago

  • Time of India

Alibaba unveils latest AI service for images in push for users

HighlightsAlibaba Group Holding Ltd. introduced Qwen VLo, an upgraded artificial intelligence model capable of generating images from text and modifying existing images, as part of its Qwen brand. The new Qwen VLo model features progressive generation technology, allowing users to observe the image creation process in real-time, enhancing user interaction and creativity. With a focus on artificial general intelligence, Alibaba aims to compete with other technology leaders in the rapidly evolving AI market, responding to innovations from companies like DeepSeek and OpenAI. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. unveiled a new iteration of its artificial-intelligence technology that will make it easier for users to generate and modify images from texts and visuals, as the Chinese ecommerce giant continues its aggressive push into AI. The Hangzhou-based company introduced Qwen VLo , part of a series of AI services under the company's Qwen brand. The new model is an upgrade from Qwen2.5-VL and is now able to generate text-to-image and image-to-image results. It also has a technology called progressive generation, meaning users can see the process as an image is created. 'This newly upgraded model not only 'understands' the world but also generates high-quality recreations based on that understanding,' the company said in a blog post. 'You can directly send a prompt like 'Generate a picture of a cute cat' to generate an image or upload an image of a cat and ask 'Add a cap on the cat's head' to modify an image.' Best known for its ecommerce operations in China, Alibaba has been charging into AI and building standalone offerings around Qwen. In February, Chief Executive Officer Eddie Wu went so far as to say the company's 'primary objective' is now artificial general intelligence , a goal in the industry to build AI systems with human-level intellectual capabilities. With the new Qwen multimodal model , it's aiming to compete with a flurry of new visual interfaces in the market, including from OpenAI. It also faces aggressive domestic competition from the likes of DeepSeek. After DeepSeek stunned the industry with a powerful model it said took just a few million dollars to build, China's technology leaders flooded the market with a rapid succession of low-cost AI services. Alibaba has rapidly updated its Qwen series, adding new capabilities to process text, pictures, audio and video — with the efficiency to run directly on phones and laptops. It unveiled a new version of its AI assistant Quark app in March.

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