PRAGUE—China’s Huawei has been excluded from a Czech tender to build a tax portal after the country’s cyber watchdog warned of possible security threats posed by the telecoms supplier, documents showed on Jan. 30.
The Czech Finance Ministry amended a tender for a new tax portal for filing returns, documentation on online registries showed.
The ministry said the tender could “not allow producers that are subject to a current warning by the NUKIB,” referring to the Czech cybersecurity agency.
“A warning from (NUKIB) is by law binding for the Financial Administration and we are obligated to carry it out,” a spokesman for the Finance Ministry’s General Financial Directorate said.
The tender is valued at 500 million crowns ($22 million) according to the Mlada Fronta Dnes daily newspaper which first reported Huawei’s exclusion.
A NUKIB warning does not constitute an outright ban but requires 160 public and private operators of critical infrastructure to conduct an analysis of risks and act accordingly.
Huawei had been seen as a favorite in the tax portal tender. A local Huawei representative could not immediately comment.
Huawei’s products have so far not been banned or excluded from planned upgrades of Czech mobile networks to next-generation 5G technology.
The company has already started testing some networks with Vodafone and testing MIMO (multiple-input and multiple-output) technology with T-Mobile.
Last November Huawei signed a memorandum of understanding on testing 5G solutions with investment group PPF.
PPF controls Czech and Slovak operator O2 Czech Republic, Czech network provider CETIN and last year bought Telenor’s mobile operations in Bulgaria, Hungary, Montenegro and Serbia.
($1 = 22.5380 Czech crowns)