The Asian Age

After Pyongyang, cybersecur­ity top concern

- RAJU GOPALAKRIS­HNAN

The South China Sea dispute and worries about North Korea dominated an Asian security summit at the weekend, but cybersecur­ity was also in focus as regional officials sought to improve coordinati­on amid a rise in high- profile hacks.

Alarmed by the theft of $ 81 million from Bangladesh’s central bank in February, one of the world’s biggest ever cyber heists, cybersecur­ity was among the top concerns discussed at Singapore’s annual Shangri- La Dialogue. For the first time, the conference allotted one of its six special sessions to cybersecur­ity.

“It was indicative that cyber has converted from being a logical threat to a physical threat,” said William Saito, special adviser to the Japanese Cabinet on IT strategy. For Japan, safeguardi­ng critical infrastruc­ture was imperative, especially since it is the host for the 2020 Olympics, and cybersecur­ity was a large part of that effort, he said.

“Cyber, because it is so cross- cutting, will just make existing threats worse,” Mr Saito said.

Cybercrimi­nals, whether from criminal gangs or rogue nations, usually operated beyond borders, the meeting was told.

“Where restrictio­ns differ, they exploit these difference­s in order to take advantage of our national systems,” said David Koh, chief executive of the cyber security agency of Singapore. “We cannot defend or view cyber threats or issues within any national borders or within a regional border,” he added. In the February heist, hackers stole money from Bangladesh Bank’s account at the New York Federal Reserve. One transfer to a Sri Lankan entity was reversed, but four transfers for $ 81 million went to the Philippine­s and wound up with casinos and casino agents there. Most of the money remains missing and the identity of the hackers is unknown. India, with nearly 500 million internet users, is preparing to set up an army of 500,000 cybersleut­hs within five years, a delegate from New Delhi said at the conference. “That can provide a bulwark for global cybersecur­ity efforts,” said Santosh Jha, joint secretary for cyber issues at the Indian external affairs ministry.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India