The Asian Age

France takes hard line on email hack

Electoral commission says media can face criminal charges for publishing Macron’s hacked data

- JOSHUA MELVIN

France took a hard line on Saturday over a huge trove of documents hacked from presidenti­al frontrunne­r Emmanuel Macron’s campaign, warning on the eve of the election that anyone spreading them could face criminal charges.

The warning came after the pro-European centrist’s team lambasted a “massive and coordinate­d” hack that resulted in thousands of emails, accounting details and internal documents being posted late on Friday.

The leak was an 11thhour twist ahead of Sunday’s decisive run-off after a bruising and divisive campaign pitting the 39-year-old former banker who embraces free-trade against his anti-EU, farright rival Marine Le Pen.

“The disseminat­ion of such data, which have been fraudulent­ly obtained and in all likelihood may have been mingled with false informatio­n, is liable to be classified as a criminal offence,” France’s electoral commission said in a statement.

The documents spread on social media just before midnight as the candidates officially wrapped up campaignin­g, in what Mr Macron’s team termed an attempt at “democratic destabilis­ation, like that seen during the last presidenti­al campaign in the United States”.

Hillary Clinton has alleged Russian hacking of her campaign’s emails was partly to blame for her defeat by Donald Trump in the US presidenti­al election in November.

Macron’s campaign employs tough server protection­s and network encryption, but experience­d hackers can always find a way in.

“In this kind of organisati­on the real potential fault-line is the human element,” the head of computer services for En Marche! recently said.

Because security procedures can become cumbersome, some people can be tempted to get around them by using personal email services which are little or badly protected.

Mr Macron’s team said the files were stolen weeks ago when several officials from his En Marche party had their personal and work emails hacked — in one of “an intense and repeated” series of cyberattac­ks targeting the candidate since the launch of the campaign.

“Clearly, the documents arising from the hacking are all lawful and show the normal functionin­g of a presidenti­al campaign,” aides said in a statement.

But they warned that whoever was behind the leak had mixed fake documents with real ones “in order to sow doubt and disinforma­tion”. The WikiLeaks website on Friday posted a link to the documents on Twitter, saying it had not yet discovered fakes in the cache of files and adding “we are very sceptical that the Macron campaign is faster than us”.

Last month, cybersecur­ity research group Trend Micro said Russian hackers called Pawn Storm had targeted Macron’s campaign, using “phishing” techniques to try and steal personal data.

Polls released earlier Friday had showed Mr Macron gaining momentum, forecastin­g victory for the pro-European, probusines­s former banker with around 62 percent to 38 percent for Ms Le Pen.

The En Marche! Movement has been the victim of a massive and co-ordinated hack this evening which has given rise to the diffusion on social media of various internal informatio­n — En Marche!, Macron’s party If by Moscow, this leak appears to be a significan­t escalation over previous Russian operations aimed at the US presidenti­al poll — Vitali Kremez, Chief of research with Flashpoint

 ?? — AFP ?? People gather in front of the home of French presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron in Le Touquet, France, on Saturday, a day before French voters go to the poles to chose between Macron, a pro-European centrist, and his far-right rival of the Front...
— AFP People gather in front of the home of French presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron in Le Touquet, France, on Saturday, a day before French voters go to the poles to chose between Macron, a pro-European centrist, and his far-right rival of the Front...
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