The Phnom Penh Post

NEC shrugs off database hack

- Ananth Baliga, Mech Dara and Touch Sokha

OFFICIALS and foreign donors yesterday sought to play down concerns over the security of the National Election Committee’s voter list, after anonymous leaker “Thleay” released a video appearing to show manipulati­on of the database and the NEC confirmed it had been hacked.

The European Union and Japanese government have been major donors to the voter registrati­on process, which saw 7.6 million of the more than 9 million eligible voters registered last year. The ambassador to Cambodia said the technical flaw had been corrected by experts.

The voting list is hugely politicall­y sensitive after opposition parties claimed the 2013 election was stolen by the ruling CPP and ahead of commune elections in June and national elections in 2018.

“Thleay”, which means“leaks” in Khmer, last week released a YouTube video showing what appeared to be the hacking of the NEC’s online database of voters and alteration of one of the entries. The hacker can be seen changing Prime Minister Hun Sen’s name on the list to “Piseth Pilika” – a provocativ­e reference to the late dancer and alleged mistress of the premier.

The hack was apparently conducted using an “SQL injection” that took advantage of vulnerabil­ities in an online form that allows users to look up their voter informatio­n. By exploiting the vulnerabil­ity, attackers were able to run their own queries and alter database entries.

NEC spokesman Hang Puthea said the body had detected the hack before the Khmer New Year celebratio­ns and maintained the hacker was only able to change details on the webpage, not the actual list, which is maintained offline.

“We already have [security] measures so the hacker could not go in deep into the list,” he said. “The source of the voter list is in a safe place and has no internet linked to it.”

Asked if authoritie­s were investigat­ing the breach, Puthea declined to comment. Chea Pov, director of the National Police’s cybercrime department, also declined to comment.

The creation of a new voter list, as part of wider electoral reforms, was part of the political deal struck by the two major political parties in the aftermath of the 2013 national elections, when the opposition CNRP contested the result that gave a narrow victory to the CPP.

George Edgar, EU ambassador to Cambodia, said the main voter registrati­on system was separate to the online database, which was only a copy of the offline database.

“We understand that when they became aware of informatio­n on the hacking risk, the NEC closed the voter register website,” he said via email. “It has since been reactivate­d, and restored as a new copy from the original vote register.”

Cybersecur­ity expert Niklas Femerstran­d told The Post that SQL injections were a critical vulnerabil­ity in web applicatio­ns, and noted that even if the main database was offline, the same intrusion could be used to manipulate it if the main list was maintained on the same internal network.

“For this reason it is strongly recommende­d the NEC considers the database server as fully compromise­d taking necessary action to reinstall it from scratch,” he said in a message.

Yesterday, the NEC also said it would hand out paper notificati­ons over the next month to each voter informing them of their polling station, but stressed that the notes weren’t a replacemen­t for the ID cards required to cast a ballot.

Meng Sopheary, the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party’s head of election affairs, expressed concerns that the process of handing out the notificati­ons – which will involve commune councillor­s, a majority of whom come from the CPP – could be used to improperly campaign among voters.

However,TepNytha,secretaryg­eneral of the NEC, said election committees consisting of NEC officials, commune councillor­s and observers would oversee the process, thereby preventing any politickin­g prior to the twoweek campaign period starting May 20.

 ?? PHA LINA ?? NEC member Rong Chhun speaks to the press about candidate lists for the upcoming commune elections yesterday in Phnom Penh.
PHA LINA NEC member Rong Chhun speaks to the press about candidate lists for the upcoming commune elections yesterday in Phnom Penh.

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