Dutch seized Chinese chipmaker following US pressure – POLITICO

“It is problematic that the CEO of the company is still the same Chinese owner,” the U.S. said, according to minutes from the meeting quoted in the court documents. “It’s almost certain that the CEO should be replaced to qualify for an exemption on the entity list.”
The emergence of U.S. pressure comes after the Dutch government announced Sunday it had in September seized control of Nexperia, based in Nijmegen in the Netherlands. The company was acquired by Chinese Wingtech in 2019. For the period of a year, Nexperia can’t go ahead with major company decisions without explicit approval of the Dutch government.
Aukje de Vries, the Dutch secretary of state for foreign trade, denied any U.S. pressure had influenced the government’s stance. “We take our own decision on this,” she told reporters during the meeting of EU trade ministers on Tuesday in Denmark.
Nexperia also said Tuesday it was hit by U.S. export controls at the end of September as a wholly owned subsidiary of Wingtech, which has been on the U.S. “entity list” since December last year. The U.S. extended its export control regime on that day to affiliates (at least 50 percent owned) of companies already on the list.
China hit back with export controls of its own a couple of days later. The commerce ministry imposed export controls on Nexperia China and its subcontractors on Oct. 4, amounting to a ban on the export of certain components manufactured in China, Nexperia said.
Wingtech on Sunday slammed the Dutch intervention as “an act of excessive interference driven by geopolitical bias, not by fact-based risk assessment,” and said it had appealed to the Chinese government for assistance.
Camille Gijs contributed reporting. This story has been updated with reactions from the Dutch government and from Wingtech.




