U.S. Department of Justice Huawei Indicts New "False in North Korean Business," February 14, 10:15 AM

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The U.S. Department of Justice has newly charged Huawei with accusing Huawei of giving false explanations to the U.S. government even though Huawei, a Chinese telecommunications equipment giant, has been doing business with North Korea in violation of UN sanctions resolutions It was announced.

The U.S. Department of Justice announced on February 13 that it has charged China's telecommunications equipment giant Huawei with 16 new charges, including bank fraud, stealing trade secrets, and deceiving the U.S. government.

According to the indictment, Huawei has been working on a number of projects in North Korea since at least 2008, but has been hiding its business in North Korea in violation of UN sanctions resolutions.

Specifically, he instructed the U.S. government not to attach the Huawei logo to packages sent to North Korea, and pointed out that the destination was not North Korea but exchanged using the A9 code. He accused him of repeating the explanation.

Regarding Huawei, in July last year, the U.S. newspaper The Washington Post reportedly suspected that it had helped North Korea establish a telecommunications network, but Huawei said "it does not do business in North Korea." He made a statement and denied coverage.

Huawei has been strongly opposed in a statement yesterday, denying the indictment "it is an attempt by the Ministry of Justice to reduce Huawei's reputation."

The US Department of Justice has already charged Huawei with fraud and money laundering in January of last year.