The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Philippine banks on alert after cyber attack in Malaysia

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We issued a general alert reminder as soon as we got BNM advisory to be extra careful over the long holiday. Although banks already do that as SOP (standard operating procedure).

MANILA: The Philippine central bank has sounded an alert to local financial institutio­ns following a cyber attack at the Malaysian central bank, in which hackers sought to steal money using fraudulent wire transfers, its governor said.

Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) has said no funds were lost in the incident, which it identified on Tuesday, and involved falsified wire-transfer requests over the SWIFT bank messaging network, the latest in a series of electronic heists at financial institutio­ns around the world.

“We issued a general alert reminder as soon as we got BNM advisory to be extra careful over the long holiday. Although banks already do that as SOP (standard operating procedure),” Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Nestor Espenilla said in a phone message.

“Informatio­n sharing is part of enhanced defensive protocols against cyber-crime,” Espenilla said.

The alert was issued on Wednesday, and there had been no specific threat, officials said.

Nestor Espenilla, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor

Bank Negara did not say who was behind the hack or how they accessed its SWIFT servers. The central bank, which supervises 45 commercial banks in Malaysia, said on Thursday there was no disruption to other payment and settlement systems the central bank operates because of the cyber attack.

In February 2016, the Philippine financial system was thrown into the global spotlight after US$81 million that was stolen from Bangladesh central bank was channelled into several accounts at Manila-based Rizal Commercial Banking Corp (RCBC), before disappeari­ng into the local casino industry.

The Bangladesh heist led financial institutio­ns around the globe to bolster security. There is no word on who was responsibl­e and Dhaka has been able to retrieve only about US$15 million.

The Philippine central bank fined RCBC a record one billion pesos (US$20 million) in 2016 for its failure to prevent the movement of the stolen money through it. RCBC has blamed rogue employees for the incident. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Espenilla gestures during an interview with Reuters at the Central bank headquarte­r in Pasay, metro Manila, Philippine­s.The Philippine central bank has sounded an alert to local financial institutio­ns following a cyber attack at the Malaysian central...
— Reuters photo Espenilla gestures during an interview with Reuters at the Central bank headquarte­r in Pasay, metro Manila, Philippine­s.The Philippine central bank has sounded an alert to local financial institutio­ns following a cyber attack at the Malaysian central...

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