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News ID: 70343
Publish Date : 11 September 2019 - 20:43

China to Build Telecom Towers on Bases in Philippines

MANILA (Dispatches) -- The Philippine military agreed on Wednesday to allow a new cellphone network powered by a Chinese state telecoms giant to install communications equipment on its army bases.
The military said in a statement it had signed a preliminary agreement with Mislatel, a consortium controlled by Philippine tycoon Dennis Uy, to install communications facilities and towers at its camps and installations.
Uy, a close associate of President Rodrigo Duterte, was awarded the country’s third telecoms license last year, helped by the last-minute withdrawal or disqualification of other bidders.
His two holding companies, which have no prior experience in telecommunications, have partnered with China Telecom, which currently owns a 40% stake, the maximum permitted under an archaic Philippines law that the government has promised to amend to support foreign investment.
The agreement comes despite calls for deeper scrutiny from some Philippine lawmakers concerned that state-controlled China Telecom could be a "Trojan horse" with the capability to access state secrets.
It comes at a time of heightened cyber security hype being waged by Washington surrounding Chinese national icon Huawei Technologies, the world’s largest telecommunications equipment maker, which has been placed on a U.S. trade blacklist since May.
Washington has been urging its allies, Manila included, not to use Huawei gear, claiming that the Beijing government could use it for espionage, an allegation Huawei has denied.
In a statement, the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) said Mislatel "guarantees that the devices, equipment, and/or structures installed at the site provided by the AFP shall not be used to obtain classified information” as a measure to prevent electronic espionage.
It noted that the AFP had a similar arrangement with the other two domestic mobile firms, Globe Telecom and rival PLDT.
The move aims to free-up state land to construct towers to try to address a shortfall that has for years resulted in intermittent signals, patchy coverage and dropped calls, with the country’s two networks inundated with traffic among the country’s 107 million population. Globe and PLDT blame excessive permit requirements for slowing their network expansion.