Sir Mike Rake steps down from Huawei UK board
Former BT Chairman had been advising Huawei since 2019
Former BT Chairman Sir Mike Rake has announced he will be stepping down from the board of Huawei in the UK.
In the latest blow to the Chinese company's presence in the UK, Sir Mike said that he will leave his role as a a non-executive director next month.
He had joined the board in 2019, and helped advise Huawei through an extremely tumultuous period that has seen it struggle worldwide.
- These are the best business SIM-only deals around today
- And the best business broadband deals
- Here are the best business mobile phone deals
Huawei board
“Huawei has made a major contribution to the UK economy, its infrastructure , research capabilities and competitiveness for twenty years with transparency and openness," Sir Mike said in a statement.
“I have been pleased to have provided advice and support to them since 2019 and particularly with the issues they have recently faced in this country.”
Huawei vice president Victor Zhang also thanked Sir Mike for his work with the company, noting that, “Sir Mike Rake’s sound guidance during a turbulent period for Huawei has proved invaluable since his advisory role began in 2019."
“A highly respected business leader and former Chairman of BT group, Sir Mike brought his wealth of telecommunications knowledge to the Huawei UK board in 2020.”
Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!
Sir Mike spent a decade at BT from 2007, a period during which BT expanded its superfast broadband network, purchased EE for £12.5 billion, and separated Openreach into an independent company.
He had recently aspoken out against the UK government's opposition to Huawei, stating that any ban would be a considerable blow to the nation's broadband ambitions.
However UK operators were banned from using Huawei’s equipment in their 5G infrastructure in July 2020.
Huawei, along with several other Chinese companies, has also been on the US ‘non-entity’ list since 2019, a status that prevents US companies from doing business with it without a licence. This has limited its access to key technologies such as Google applications and US-manufactured components.
- Here are the best deals for Huawei mobile phones
Via Sky News
Mike Moore is Deputy Editor at TechRadar Pro. He has worked as a B2B and B2C tech journalist for nearly a decade, including at one of the UK's leading national newspapers and fellow Future title ITProPortal, and when he's not keeping track of all the latest enterprise and workplace trends, can most likely be found watching, following or taking part in some kind of sport.
Necessity is the mother of invention: Huawei is pairing its supercharged SSD with a 60-year old piece of technology — seemingly because of US export restrictions
Here's a great idea! MSI is giving away Microsoft 365 office suite with some of its laptops in Japan — so when will that be extended globally?