The Chinese Foreign Ministry on Thursday described US legislation targeting technology giant Huawei and other Chinese telecommunications companies as "hysteria."

From the US to Poland, the embattled Chinese company and some of its employees have been targeted by authorities as Western countries seek to limit its scope of operations domestically due to security fears and allegations of intellectual property theft.

Read more: Berlin's dilemma: My way or the Huawei?

Huawei targeted around the world:

US lawmakers put forward a bipartisan bill on Wednesday to block the sale of US chips to Chinese telecommunications companies. Huawei and ZTE were cited in the draft law, with one US lawmaker describing Huawei as "an intelligence-gathering arm of the Chinese Communist Party."

Several top Huawei officials have been arrested across the globe. Poland detained Huawei executive Wang Weijing last Friday on espionage-related charges. In Canada, CFO Meng Wanzhou is under house arrest pending a US extradition request.

The German government has actively sought ways to prevent Huawei from building the country's 5G network, according to business newspaper Handelsblatt. Other countries, including the US, have already enacted bans.

Read more: Huawei 'could give Chinese spies our secrets,' EU fears

Watch video 01:14 Share Chinese telecoms giant Huawei unveils 5G test Send Facebook google+ Whatsapp Tumblr linkedin stumble Digg reddit Newsvine Permalink https://p.dw.com/p/34GtB Chinese telecoms giant Huawei unveils 5G test

'Death penalty'

Conservative US Senator Tom Cotton, who introduced the draft bill, said: "If Chinese telecom companies like Huawei violate our sanctions or export control laws, they should receive nothing less than the death penalty — which this denial order would provide."

In a rare interview, Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei rejected allegations of close ties to the Chinese government, saying: "I love my country, I support the Communist Party. But I will not do anything to harm the world. I don't see a close connection between my personal political beliefs and the businesses of Huawei."

China's Commerce Ministry dismissed security concerns stemming from Chinese technology companies in comments carried by the Communist Party-run Global Times, saying they were "baseless accusations."

The Federation of German Industries (BDI) said on Thursday that Huawei, along with any other competitor, should not be barred from developing Germany's 5G network unless an investigation proves evidence of illegal activities.

Read more: Huawei spying in Poland raises calls for boycott

Security concerns

For years now, US authorities have accused Huawei of being an information conduit for Chinese intelligence agencies. Washington has repeatedly warned allies that Chinese agencies could gain access to "back doors," which would provide easy access for cyber espionage operations.

In December, Germany's Deutsche Telekom said it would review its vendor strategy concerning Huawei. A month later, German business newspaper Handelsblatt reported that German government officials were seeking ways to block Huawei from building parts of its telecommunications infrastructure.

Other countries have already decided to block the Chinese technology giant from rolling out 5G networks, including Australia and New Zealand. Huawei has consistently rejected the allegations. However, last week, a Huawei executive and a former Polish domestic intelligence employee working in cybersecurity were arrested on espionage charges, triggering fresh security fears.

Read more: ZTE, Huawei bans: Genuine security concerns or part of China trade spat?

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ls/rt (AFP, AP, Reuters)