Lenovo: US measures are unfair By Liu Baijia (China Daily) Updated: 2006-05-24 08:38
Lenovo Group, which acquired the personal computer business of IBM in
2004, yesterday expressed deep concern about unfair measures taken by the US
Congress and administration on a recent contract it won.
In March, Lenovo
bid successfully for a US State Department contract to provide 16,000 Lenovo
Thinkcentre M51 desktop computers and equipment worth US$13 million through its
US distributor CDW Government Inc.
However, under pressure from
some members of the US Congress who claimed that the Hong Kong-listed Lenovo is
held by the Chinese Government and the procurement of its computers may lead to
intelligence leaks, the State Department said last week that it would reallocate
900 of the computers.
They were originally supposed to be deployed
in a classified network and will now be used in unclassified
networks.
The State Department also said it would revise its procurement
process.
"The attitude of the US Government is very unfair to a
company like Lenovo, which is totally based on market operations. We are deeply
concerned," said Yang Yuanqing, chairman of Lenovo.
After the Chinese
company acquired the IBM unit, it had to make several changes, including
moving its global headquarters to the United States and building a separate
campus.
Also, five American directors sit on its 12-member
board.
Last year, Lenovo agreed to produce computers supplied to US
government agencies and to ease the worries of information security, promised
that the sales and services would be provided by US partners.
Yesterday,
the company urged the US administration to provide a fair and level playing
ground; and also called for help from the Chinese Government to secure equal
treatment in the United States.
Eagle Zhang, general manager of Analysys
International, a market consultant, said the State Department's change of the
attitude does not change the volume of this contract, but it may set a precedent
for other US government agencies or enterprises.
He added that computers
are standardized and transparent products; and it is impossible for
manufacturers to elicit information from them.
"What is the logic when a
product is OK if it is called IBM Thinkcentre; but there are problems if it is
called Lenovo Thinkcentre?" he asked.
Also yesterday, the Foreign
Ministry expressed hope that the United States eases restrictions on high-tech
exports to China.
"We hope the US will abandon its Cold War mentality ...
and increasingly relax restrictions on high-tech exports to China and promote
bilateral co-operation on trade in high-tech products," spokesman Liu Jianchao
said.
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