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>>4429166 pb
Huawei connected to Jiang Ze Min (The GWHB of China)
Huawei Chairwoman Sun Yafang, who has been in the position since 1999, is another prominent figure in the company and considered one of the most powerful women in the world. According to CIA reports, she has a background in the Ministry of State Security (MSS), China’s intelligence agency.
Sun’s influence within Huawei overshadowed Ren’s. In 2010, Sun pressured Ren into giving up plans to promote his son, Ren Ping, as heir of Huawei. This suggests that Huawei is largely controlled by Chinese regime intelligence.
Additionally, prior to the corruption purges launched by current Chinese leader Xi Jinping, the MSS was firmly in the hands of the Jiang faction.
The heads of the MSS between 1985 and 2016 were Jia Chunwang, who served until 1998, then Xu Yongyue, who was on the job after Jia until 2007, when he was replaced by Geng Huichang.
Jia has strong relations with former Communist Party leader Jiang and his allies. Jia’s son-in-law is Liu Lefei, the chairman of CITIC Private Equity Funds Management Co. Ltd. and the son of Liu Yunshan, a retired high-ranking CCP official linked to Jiang. Before his retirement at the beginning of this year, Liu Yunshan was one of seven members of the Politburo Standing Committee that leads the Communist Party.
https://www.theepochtimes.com/the-relationship-between-huawei-and-the-chinese-regimes-factional-politics-2_2736713.html
“Business was flattish in the first decade, and then things took off like crazy. People suspect that something must have happened to help, but it’s a mystery even inside the company,” says the former executive.
There are signs that Mr Ren received support from the very top. In 1994, he briefed Jiang Zemin, then president and leader of the Communist party. A few years later, Huawei built a first nationwide communications network for the PLA.
Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/commentary/huawei-meng-wanzhou-ren-zhengfei-founder-general-magnate-11036564
in the early 1990s, Huawei also secured a key contract with the PLA, and in the mid-1990s the government began touting Huawei as a national champion. High-profile meetings between RenZhengfei and then-President Jiang Zemin precipitated many important government contracts.
Some say it was these high-level exchanges that unlocked more state-sponsored financing. In 1998 the Beijing branch of China Construction Bank lent Huawei RMB 3.9 billion in buyer’s credit. Similarly, anecdotes arose of the government extending loans to cover for the situations where Huawei was providing services to local government-affiliated institutions for free. It’s unclear whether this money was ever repaid.
http://knowledge.ckgsb.edu.cn/2014/06/16/china-business-strategy/huawei-takes-on-the-world/
Executives of two major Chinese technology companies, Charles Ding of Huawei, left, and Zhu Jinyun of ZTE, right, are sworn in on Capitol Hill in Washington on Sept 13, 2012, before testifying whether their expansion in the American market poses a threat to U.S. national security
http://world.time.com/2012/10/09/are-chinese-telecoms-firms-really-spying-on-americans/
Finally, On the same day Zhang Shoucheng (A Stanford University physicist and entrepreneur who was rumored to be in line for the Nobel Prize) committed suicide, the chief financial officer of the controversial Chinese telecommunications company Huawei, Meng Wanzhou, was arrested.
https://web.archive.org/web/20181213123206/https://www.theepochtimes.com/suicide-of-chinese-scientist-zhang-shoucheng-sparks-controversy_2736634.html
The reputed scientist Zhang Shoucheng was supposed to cooperate with Huawei with his quantum technology.
http://www.followcn.com/ccps-recklessness-with-evil-will-finally-cause-its-own-destruction/