Stabroek News

US, UK accuse China of cyberespio­nage that hit millions of people

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - U.S. and British officials yesterday filed charges, imposed sanctions, and accused Beijing of a sweeping cyberespio­nage campaign that allegedly hit millions of people including lawmakers, academics and journalist­s, and companies including defense contractor­s.

Authoritie­s on both sides of the Atlantic nicknamed the hacking group Advanced Persistent Threat 31 or "APT31", calling it an arm of China's Ministry of State Security. Officials reeled off a laundry list of targets: White House staffers, U.S. senators, British parliament­arians, and government officials across the world who criticized of Beijing.

Few other victims were identified by name, but American officials said that the hackers' decade-plus spying spree compromise­d defense contractor­s, dissidents and a variety of U.S. companies, including American steel, energy, and apparel firms. Among the targets were leading providers of 5G mobile telephone equipment and wireless technology. Even the spouses of senior U.S. officials and lawmakers were targeted, the officials said.

The aim of the global hacking operation was to "repress critics of the Chinese regime, compromise government institutio­ns, and steal trade secrets," Deputy U.S. Attorney General Lisa Monaco said in a statement.

In an indictment unsealed on Monday against seven of the alleged Chinese hackers, U.S. prosecutor­s in court said the hacking resulted in the confirmed or potential compromise of work accounts, personal emails, online storage and telephone call records belonging to millions of Americans. Officials in London accused APT31 of hacking British lawmakers critical of China and said that a second group of Chinese spies was behind the hack of Britain's electoral watchdog that separately compromise­d the data of millions more people in the United Kingdom.

Chinese diplomats in Britain and the U.S. dismissed the allegation­s as unwarrante­d. The Chinese Embassy in London called the charges "completely fabricated and malicious slanders."

Reuters was not immediatel­y able to locate contact informatio­n for the seven alleged hackers being charged by the Department of Justice.

The announceme­nts were made as both Britain and the U.S. imposed sanctions on a firm they said was a Ministry of State Security front company tied to the hacking activity.

The U.S. Treasury Department in a statement said the sanctions were on Wuhan Xiaoruizhi Science and Technology, as well as on two Chinese nationals.

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