India Bans more
Chinese apps, including some from Xiaomi, Baidu
· The
bans are part of India's moves to counter China's dominant presence in the
country's internet services market
· The
govt in June banned 59 Chinese apps for threatening
the country's 'sovereignty and integrity', including TikTok,
UC Browser and Mi Community app
India
has banned some mobile apps of Chinese companies such as Xiaomi Corp and Baidu Inc,
three sources told Reuters on Wednesday, in New Delhi's latest move to hit
Chinese companies following a border clash between the neighbours.
India
in June outlawed 59 Chinese apps for threatening the country's
"sovereignty and integrity", including ByteDance's
video-sharing app TikTok, Alibaba's UC Browser and
Xiaomi's Mi Community app.
Another
ban was imposed in recent weeks on about 47 apps which mostly contained clones,
or simply different versions, of the already banned apps, the sources said.
Unlike
its June move, the government did not make its latest decision public, but
there are a few new apps that have made it to that list, including Xiaomi's Mi Browser Pro and Baidu's search apps, the sources said.
It
wasn't immediately clear how many new apps have been affected.
India's
IT Ministry and the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi did not respond to a request
for comment. China has previously criticized India's decision to ban the apps.
A
spokesman for Xiaomi in India said the company was trying to understand the
development and will take appropriate measures. Baidu declined to comment.
A
ban on the Mi Browser, which comes pre-loaded on most
Xiaomi smartphones, could potentially mean the Chinese firm will need to stop
installing it on new devices it sells in India.
Xiaomi
is India's No.1 smartphone seller with close to 90 million users, according to
Hong Kong-based tech researcher Counterpoint.
The
bans are part of India's moves to counter China's dominant presence in the
country's internet services market following a border clash in June between the
two nuclear-armed neighbours in which 20 Indian
soldiers were killed.
India
has also made approval processes more stringent for Chinese companies wanting
to invest in the country, and also tightened norms for Chinese companies
wanting to participate in government tenders.