Huawei Technologies founder and chief executive Ren Zhengfei has assured Communications Minister Amy Adams that the world's second-biggest maker of networking gear poses no threat to cyber-security.
Speaking in his first public media briefing through a translator, Ren told reporters in Wellington that he told Adams in a meeting this week that "there should not be too much concern" over internet security. Huawei was accused of being a risk to US security in a Congress intelligence committee report last year, and has since stopped supplying equipment to American carriers.
"Our business is just like building pipes," Ren said "Our pipe carries the data and information traffic - if the water running through the pipe is polluted, I think it is not the pipe that should be blamed."
"We are no longer selling our telecom equipment to telecom carriers in the US," he said. "If for example the United States continues to say 'we still have this security problem', that may prove in hindsight that the decision may not be very fact based."
Huawei has become a major player in New Zealand's telecommunications sector, recently winning the tender to build Telecom's 4G mobile network and beating out the local carrier's past architect, Alcatel Lucent. The Chinese company is also a major supplier to Vodafone New Zealand and Two Degrees Mobile, as well as providing technology for the government's ultrafast broadband network.