HomeLatest NewsTelecomHuawei faces further isolation as Swedish court upholds ban on its 5G network gear

Huawei faces further isolation as Swedish court upholds ban on its 5G network gear

Among the important markets where the Chinese company is steering at a ban also include India, Canada and other EU countries apart from the US, the UK that have already banned the company

Preferred Source of Google

In a major setback to top Chinese telecom gear maker, , a Swedish court has upheld a ban on the company from selling 5G equipment in Sweden. The Chinese equipment maker is already facing difficulties across the global markets following a ban slapped on the company’s 5G technology by the US administration.

The ban has also dashed Huawei’s hopes of staging a comeback in Europe and increasing the chances of potential retaliation by China against rival Ericsson. Among the important markets where the Chinese company is steering at a ban also include India, Canada and other EU countries apart from the US, and other western countries that have already banned the company.  

Romania is the latest country that in effect barred China and Huawei from taking part in the development of its 5G telecommunication networks in the country.

Advertisement
Saksham Bharat 2026
Saksham Bharat 2026
A multi-stakeholder dialogue on skilling gap in Cybersecurity, Data Resilience and AI — and the roadmap to a Saksham Bharat.
Register Now →
VeeamON 2026 Tour India - Mumbai
VeeamON 2026 Tour India - Mumbai
A VeeamON 2026 India Leadership Series Mumbai for senior public sector and government technology leaders.
Register Now →
Cyber Surakshit Uttar Pradesh
Cyber Surakshit Uttar Pradesh
Find out strategies, frameworks and solutions for building a resilient and secure digital ecosystem across Uttar Pradesh.
Register Now →
VeeamON 2026 Tour India - Bengaluru
VeeamON 2026 Tour India - Bengaluru
A VeeamON 2026 India Leadership Series Bengaluru for senior public sector and government technology leaders.
Register Now →
VeeamON 2026 Tour India - Delhi
VeeamON 2026 Tour India - Delhi
A VeeamON 2026 India Leadership Series Delhi for senior public sector and government technology leaders.
Register Now →
Infosec Reimagined
Infosec Reimagined
Infosec Reimagined 2026 is the premier information security summit where top leaders—CISOs, CROs, CIOs, CTOs and risk executives—converge to redefine cyber resilience.
Register Now →
Digital Senate
Digital Senate
Digital Senate is a premier conference uniting government leaders, technologists and innovators to share ideas, success stories and strategies on digital governance, public sector transformation, cybersecurity and emerging technologies in India.
Register Now →
CIO Prism
CIO Prism
CIO Prism unites forward-thinking technology leaders to exchange transformative insights, shape digital strategies, and foster innovation, empowering enterprises to excel in an era of rapid technological change.
Register Now →

Earlier in October last year, Swedish telecom regulator PTS banned Huawei from supplying 5G equipment to Swedish mobile firms due to security concerns raised by Sweden’s security service SAPO, a decision the Chinese company challenged in the court.

“Sweden’s security is of heavy importance and the administrative court has taken into account that only the Security Police and the armed forces together have an overall picture regarding the security situation and the threat to Sweden,” the court said in a statement.

Huawei said it was considering its options. “It’s not unexpected based on the fact that the court is also leading their conclusions on basically the assumptions being made by SAPO,” Kenneth Fredriksen, Huawei’s Executive , Central East Europe and Nordic Region said.

Advertisement

“We will continue to fight for our right to be in the (Swedish) market.” European governments have been tightening controls on Chinese companies building 5G networks following diplomatic pressure from Washington, which alleges Huawei equipment could be used by Beijing for spying. Huawei has repeatedly denied being a national security risk.

Huawei’s troubles have not only helped companies like Nokia and Ericsson to grab market share in Europe, but Samsung Electronics also made its entry into the continent by signing British telecoms group as a customer for supplying 5G network equipment.

Meanwhile, China has asked Sweden to “immediately correct the mistake” of banning Huawei and issued a veiled warning this month that it might take retaliatory action against Ericsson.

Get the day's headlines from Tech Observer straight in your inbox

By subscribing you agree to our Privacy Policy, T&C and consent to receive newsletters and other important communications.
Tech Observer Desk
Tech Observer Desk
Tech Observer Desk at TechObserver.in is a team of technology reporters led by a senior editor who brings latest updates and developments from the world of technology.
- Advertisement -
Powered By Veeam Logo
- Advertisement -

Subscribe to our Newsletter

By subscribing you agree to our Privacy Policy, T&C and consent to receive newsletters and other important communications.
- Advertisement -

AI agents break legacy security models, Veeam CEO warns at VeeamON

Veeam Software CEO Anand Eswaran says zero-trust security models built for human users have broken down as autonomous AI agents move inside enterprises at machine speed, and that recovery, identity and data governance can no longer be treated as separate problems.

RELATED ARTICLES