Prague: Experts called on 5G providers on Friday to heed supply chain security in light of concerns about technology providers such as China's Huawei, recently banned by the US government.
"The overall risk of influence on a supplier by a third country should be taken into account, notably in relation to its model of governance, the absence of cooperation agreements on security," said a statement published by a 5G security conference in Prague.
"Security and risk assessments of vendors and network technologies should take into account rule of law, security environment, vendor malfeasance, and compliance with open, interoperable, secure standards and industry best practices," it added.
Called "the Prague Proposals," the non-binding statement also singled out the supplier country's adherence to "multilateral, international or bilateral agreements on cybersecurity, the fight against cybercrime, or data protection" as a security criterion.
Responding to the conclusions of the conference, Huawei said in a Friday statement that it was "committed to working with regulators, operators and industry organisations to develop effective rules which can build a stronger, more resilient and safer network."
"As the EU continues its deliberations, we firmly believe that any future security principles should be based on verifiable facts and technical data," Huawei said in the statement forwarded by email.
The United States has banned government agencies from buying equipment from Huawei over fears Beijing could spy on communications and gain access to critical infrastructure if the firm is allowed to develop foreign 5G networks offering instantaneous mobile data transfer.