A Chinese delegation representing a China-made version of a
networking technology has called for diplomatic support after
quitting an ongoing international meeting in Prague due to "unfair
treatment."
"It has become necessary for the Chinese government to give
diplomatic support to the home-grown WAPI technology," the
delegation said on Thursday through an e-mail to Xinhua.
The U.S. government has played an important role in supporting
its own technology competing against WAPI, said the e-mailed
statement.
The meeting in the capital of Czech Republic was held to discuss
which of the two technologies would become the international
standard for wireless local area network (WLAN) encryption. The
Chinese version, known as WAPI, was competing against its rival
American 11i for the right to be recognized by the International
Standardization Organization (ISO).
Last March the WAPI standard lost an international vote in a
fast-track ballot, which the Chinese side says was unfairly
conducted under the influence of the 11i camp.
According to ISO rules, national bodies voting against either of
the two technologies are supposed to attend the meeting in Prague,
scheduled to close on Thursday local time. Only seven of the 17
countries opposing WAPI showed up.
All kinds of views should have been presented at the meeting but
actually it did not allow the Chinese delegation to speak about
IEEE's violations of ISO procedures and rules, said the
statement.
IEEE, the American Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers Inc, has been accused by the Chinese delegation of
violating ISO rules and misleading other nations to vote against
WAPI.
"China lost its right to elaborate on its opinion at the meeting
and WAPI has been deprived of an opportunity to change its fate
following the vote," the statement said.
"In this extremely unfair atmosphere, it is meaningless for the
Chinese delegation to continue attending the meeting," it said.
"The monopoly force from the American standard maker IEEE
poisoned the voting process and created an unfair atmosphere at the
Prague meeting," said a member of the Chinese delegation surnamed
Huang.
In appeals made to the ISO in late April, China asked the
organization to delay analysis of the voting result and IEEE to
apologize for its "amoral behavior."
The appeal is still pending but the analysis meeting was held
despite the request for a delay.
As a wireless security technology developed by Chinese
companies, WAPI has received a lot of attention.
In May 2003, the Chinese Ministry of Information Industry (MII)
declared WAPI as the national standard and said that all WLAN
equipment sold in China should comply with the new technology as of
Dec. 1 that year. A transition period was granted later to extend
the compliance deadline for some WLAN products to June 1, 2004.
However, during the following annual joint commission on
commerce and trade between China and the United States, China
agreed to delay the enforcement of the WAPI standard because of
pressure from the 11i camp through the American government.
The Chinese government has decided to adopt and support the
technology in domestic market. The WAPI work group hopes to see
more diplomatic efforts from its government to facilitate its way
into the international market.
(Xinhua News Agency June 9, 2006)