The Lithuanian side signed the contract last Friday. Nuctech Warsaw, the winning bidder, is expected to do so in the next few days, Vitas Volungevicius, a spokesman for the Customs Department, told BNS on Monday.

The value of the contract will not be disclosed until it has been finally signed, he said, adding that the procurement had been preliminary valued at 4 million euros, but the department managed to secure a lower price.

The contract calls for the X-ray equipment to be purchased by December 4, but the deadline can be extended for a year.

According to Volungevicius, this will depend on when Lietuvos Gelezinkeliai (Lithuanian Railways, LTG) builds the necessary infrastructure. The department and the state railway company signed a contract for this back in 2019.

Lithuania's governmental commission vetting deals of importance to national security cleared the deal with Nuctech Warsaw in early August.

Kestutis Lancinskas, an advisor to the prime minister, then noted that Lithuanian customs officers were checking freight shipments manually at a time of an influx of irregular migrants from Belarus and an increase in smuggling across the border.

The deal was approved in light of the situation at the border, but "an extensive list of conditions and preconditions" regarding deadlines, software, Internet connections and many other things was attached to it, he said.

Earlier this year, Nuctech Warsaw was barred from Lithuanian airports' baggage scanner tender due to national security concerns.

Nuctech then dismissed the concerns, saying that its equipment is produced in the Polish capital "under the strictest applicable EU and national performance and safety standards".

Darius Zvironas, head of the Customs Department, has told BNS earlier that the department received two bids to supply X-ray equipment, but only Nuctech Warsaw's offer met the tender requirements.

Lithuanian Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte has said that the Kena crossing point on the border with Belarus needs to have an X-ray machine as soon as possible

The Wall Street Journal reported in June 2020 that US agencies had launched a campaign against Nuctech's operations in Europe.

Critics say that Nuctech's "extreme low-level pricing strategy" suggests that its motives are not commercial but rather "an interest to control strategic EU infrastructure and data driven knowledge", according to the article.

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