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A Huawei logo in central Warsaw, Poland, in June. Photo: Reuters

US will deal with Huawei waiver applications within weeks, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross says

  • About 50 submissions received from 35 tech companies seeking to sell products to blacklisted Chinese telecoms giant
  • Trump said last month that sales could resume as he sought to restart trade talks with Beijing

The Trump administration plans to handle applications from tech companies seeking waivers over Huawei Technologies blacklisting within the next few weeks, US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told Bloomberg Television on Tuesday.

“We will deal with them very promptly,” Ross said. “There are 50-some-odd applications from 35 companies that have been received, and within the next couple of weeks we expect to have verdicts.”

Pressed on whether they would be completed in two weeks, Ross said: “I said within the next few weeks, few.”

Ross’s comments came a day after US President Donald Trump told the heads of top technology companies at the White House that the administration would make “timely” decisions on requests by US companies to sell products to Huawei.

Huawei CEO sees 30 per cent gain in handset shipments despite US ban

American companies were banned from selling most US parts and components to Huawei without special licences because of national security concerns. But Trump said last month that sales could resume as he sought to restart trade talks with Beijing.

Ross said the technology company officials who gathered at the White House understood the process the administration was following and voiced no complaint about it.

He said granting the waivers was an inter-agency process, involving the departments of commerce, state, defence and energy.

US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross says the Commerce Ministry will deal with the applications promptly. Photo: Reuters

“This is not a simple thing, but in general the principle we will be following … is things that are not sensitive from a national security point of view, we’re going to be looking pretty favourably upon,” Ross said.

“Those that are sensitive are in a different category and we have to be very, very careful about them.”

Asked about the possibility of additional sanctions following a Washington Post report that the Chinese company had helped North Korea build its wireless network, Ross said the administration was monitoring Huawei’s activities.

“We are continuing to watch very carefully everything about Huawei, including the information revealed in that article yesterday. But beyond that, we can’t really comment on a pending investigation,” he said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Huawei waivers verdict coming soon
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