TikTok, WeChat and other Chinese tech firms should claim compensation from India after app ban, says Global Times
- Global Times editor-in-chief Hu Xijin said Chinese technology companies banned in India should sue for compensation, reflecting rising frustration in Beijing
- India made its ban of 59 Chinese apps by such tech giants as ByteDance and Tencent permanent this week after companies failed to convince courts to overturn it
Hu Xijin, the editor-in-chief of the nationalist tabloid, also published the editorial on his WeChat account on Tuesday, arguing that Chinese companies must “defend their rights by using laws as weapons and seek compensation from the Indian government”.
The Chinese embassy in New Delhi said in a statement that China urges India to “immediately correct discriminatory conduct to avoid creating greater losses for both sides”. China’s foreign ministry said earlier that Beijing opposes New Delhi’s decision to ban Chinese apps, but the Chinese government has not taken any retaliatory measures.
No Chinese companies have indicated whether they would follow the newspaper’s call to sue the Indian government. This includes silence from ByteDance, whose short video app TikTok was widely popular in India before the ban.
ByteDance is now cutting the size of its 2,000-plus team in India as it is not sure when it will be able to resume operations in the country, Reuters reported on Wednesday, citing an internal memo.
In addition to TikTok, India banned 58 other Chinese apps last June, citing security concerns. The Times of India reported on Monday that the Indian government gave the apps a chance to explain their position on compliance with privacy and security requirements in the previous months, but the response given by Chinese companies failed to convince the government to lift any of the bans.
As a result, the Indian government has moved to make the ban permanent. Hu called the move “an act of bandits and robbers in a civilised world”.
Before tensions boiled over last summer, India was seen by many Chinese tech companies as a key market for international expansion. Since a series of border clashes last year, though, there has been a backlash against Chinese companies among both consumers and the government, making the once-promising market a volatile one for many Chinese tech firms.
02:05
India bans another 118 Chinese apps as border tensions escalate
India was not the only country to target Chinese apps last year. The US also sought to restrict the use of Chinese apps on national security grounds.
However, TikTok and WeChat, the two most high-profile apps targeted, received a reprieve from the courts after legal challenges from respective owners ByteDance and Tencent Holdings.
Lobbying groups have also pushed back on the executive orders from former US president Donald Trump.
Hu called the ban “an unprecedented case in international economic exchange of political persecution against a specific business group”, saying Chinese tech companies entered the Indian market legally.
03:07
Stop offering ‘untrusted’ Chinese apps like TikTok and WeChat, Washington urges US tech companies
Without using a circumvention tool like a virtual private network (VPN), China’s netizens are cut off from Google, YouTube, Twitter, Facebook and WhatsApp, among many other services.
Dev Lewis, a fellow at Hong Kong-based think tank Digital Asia Hub, said that “it always looks like a case of throwing stones in a glass house” when China complains about its apps being banned given the country’s track record on blocking apps at home.
Lewis also said China and India face diverging opinions on the issue. The Indian public has been led to believe that this action is being taken against China because of the deadly border clashes, but Chinese state media has repeatedly framed it as a trade dispute in which India is erecting protectionist barriers, downplaying it as a geopolitical issue.
Lu Wei, the former head of the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), justified the country’s internet policies at a press conference in 2014, saying foreign tech firms must obey Chinese laws if they want to access users in China.
Lu was known as China’s internet tsar until he was placed under investigation in late 2017 and sentenced in 2019 to 14 years in prison for accepting bribes.
At that same press conference, when asked why China bans services like Facebook, Lu said China does not shut down any website overseas. “As to who will become a guest at our place, that’s something we will choose,” he said.