China to remove foreign technology from government offices

The Chinese Communist Party has ordered all government offices to remove foreign hardware and software from their systems in the next three years, the Financial Times reported Sunday.

The directive comes amidst a broader trade war between the U.S. and China and on the heels of aggressive efforts by American lawmakers to keep Chinese companies, like Huawei, out of the U.S.

The policy has been nicknamed “3-5-2” because the technology replacement will happen at a pace of 30 percent in 2020, 50 percent in 2021, and 20 percent in 2022, the Times reported, citing analysts from brokerage firm China Securities.

The firm’s analysts told the outlet that as many as 30 million pieces of hardware would need to be replaced in the process.

They also noted that the order had come from the Chinese Communist party’s Central Office earlier this year.

Two cybersecurity firms separately confirmed the details of the directive to the Times based on government clients describing it to them.