Fiji Sun

Australian intelligen­ce reportedly concluded that China was responsibl­e for a major hack on Australia’s parliament in the lead-up to its most recent elections

Sources told Reuters the report suggested keeping the findings a secret so that Canberra could maintain trade relations with Beijing.

- Business Insider Feedback: com.fj nemani.delaibatik­i@fijisun.

Australian intelligen­ce concluded that China was behind a major cyberattac­k on its parliament and major political parties in the lead up to the most recent elections, Reuters reported on Monday local time, citing five people with direct knowledge of the matter.

Reuters cited a classified report by the Australian Signals Directorat­e (ASD), the government agency responsibl­e for cyber warfare, which is said to have determined in March that China’s Ministry of State Security was behind the hacks.

Parties affected

Three of Australia’s major political parties, including the Liberal, Labor, and National parties, were also impacted by the breach of the federal parliament’s computer systems revealed earlier this year.

Reuters said it did not review the classified report, which included comment from the Department of Foreign Affairs. The report is said to have suggested keeping the findings a secret so that Canberra could maintain trade relations with Beijing.

Two sources told Reuters that independen­t members of parliament and other political parties were not impacted by the hack. They added that it was unclear when the attack began or how long it went on for.

Australia’s most recent national elections took place on May 18 and Scott Morrison, Australia’s conservati­ve prime minister, pulled off a shocking win. China’s Foreign Ministry denied involvemen­t in the cyberattac­k and told Reuters that the report is “just creating rumours and smearing others.”

“When investigat­ing and determinin­g the nature of online incidents there must be full proof of the facts, otherwise it’s just creating rumours and smearing others, pinning labels on people indiscrimi­nately. We would like to stress that China is also a victim of internet attacks,” the ministry said in a statement.

Australian PM’s response

Mr Morrison has not directly placed blame on China but suggested in February that a “sophistica­ted state actor” was behind the security breach. He did not explain how security detected the attack or what it did to combat the threat.

Senior intelligen­ce sources told the Sydney Morning Herald at the time that the advanced malware used in the attack was only available to a small portion of countries, many of whom are friendly to Australia. The sources told SMH that left China and Russia as potential suspects.

China in February said suggestion­s that it was behind the attack were “baseless” and “irresponsi­ble.”

“Irresponsi­ble reports, accusation­s, pressurizi­ng and sanctions will only heighten tensions and confrontat­ion in cyberspace and poison the atmosphere for cooperatio­n,” said China foreign ministry spokespers­on Geng Shuang.

 ??  ?? Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

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