China unveils sanctions regime after U.S. ban on TikTok, WeChat

It prepares ‘unreliable entities list’ against U.S.’s ‘entity list’

September 19, 2020 09:44 pm | Updated 09:45 pm IST

FILE — The Chinese-owned messaging service WeChat on a smartphone in Hong Kong, Jan. 3, 2019. Downloads of the popular messaging app, a lifeline for many in America to stay in touch with family and friends in China, are barred in the U.S. starting at midnight on Sunday, Sept. 20, 2020, an escalation in the U.S.-China feud over trade, security and other issues that will suddenly become personal for millions of users. (Kenneth Tsang/The New York Times)

FILE — The Chinese-owned messaging service WeChat on a smartphone in Hong Kong, Jan. 3, 2019. Downloads of the popular messaging app, a lifeline for many in America to stay in touch with family and friends in China, are barred in the U.S. starting at midnight on Sunday, Sept. 20, 2020, an escalation in the U.S.-China feud over trade, security and other issues that will suddenly become personal for millions of users. (Kenneth Tsang/The New York Times)

China on Saturday launched a mechanism that would allow it to sanction foreign companies, upping the ante in a tech war with the U.S. a day after Washington moved to curb popular Chinese apps TikTok and WeChat.

China’s long-expected “unreliable entities list” is seen as a weapon for Beijing to retaliate against the U.S., which has used its own “entity list” to shut Chinese telecom giant Huawei out of the US market, while also moving against TikTok and WeChat.

Its implementation comes just a day after the U.S. Commerce Department stepped up the pressure by ordering a ban on downloads of video app TikTok and effectively blocking use of WeChat, the Chinese super-app.

An announcement by China’s Ministry of Commerce did not mention any specific foreign entities that could be targeted.

Tough tone

But it said the new system would consider sanctions on entities whose activities “harm China’s national sovereignty, security, and development interests” or violate “internationally accepted economic and trade rules”.

That language closely tracks wording that Beijing has used to repeatedly denounce U.S. actions against Chinese companies.

Punitive measures may include fines against the foreign entity, banning it from conducting trade and investment in China, and restrictions on the entry of personnel or equipment into the country.

It covers “foreign enterprises, other organisations and individuals”, the Ministry said.

Under Friday’s U.S. order against the Chinese apps, Tencent-owned WeChat would lose functionality in the United States from Sunday. TikTok users will be banned from installing updates but could keep accessing the service through November 12.

That timeframe potentially allows for a tie-up between TikTok, owned by China’s ByteDance, and a U.S. company to safeguard data for the wildly popular app to allay Washington’s security concerns.

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