The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Washington charges two Chinese over alleged state-sponsored hacking

-

WASHINGTON: The United States has charged two Chinese men it says hacked the computer systems of companies and government agencies in a dozen countries, in what Washington says was a widereachi­ng state-backed campaign of cyber-espionage.

Nasa and the US Navy were among those allegedly targeted in a programme the US Justice Department said also hit a major bank, telecom companies and healthcare providers in 12 countries.

The charges drew a furious response from Beijing, which accused Washington of‘ fabricatin­g facts’.

Deputy Attorney-General Rod Rosenstein said China had repeatedly broken President Xi Jinping’s 2015 pledge to halt cyberattac­ks on US companies and commercial infrastruc­ture.

“It is unacceptab­le that we continue to uncover cybercrime committed by China against other nations,” he said.

“We want China to cease its illegal cyber activities and honour its commitment to the internatio­nal community. But the evidence suggests that China may not intend to live up to its promises.”

US ally Britain also joined the charge, with Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt saying Beijing continued to hack computer systems for commercial and economic motives.

“These activities must stop. They go against the commitment­s made to the UK in 2015, and, as part of the G20, not to conduct or support cyber-enabled theft of intellectu­al property or trade secrets,” he said.

American officials said evidence showed hackers had targeted Managed Service Providers (MSPs) — specialist firms that help companies manage their informatio­n technology systems — potentiall­y giving them access to the computer networks of dozens of companies.

Individual firms were not named in the indictment, but the 45 victims in the United States included government agencies — Nasa’s Goddard Space Flight Centre and Jet Propulsion Labourator­y, the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Labourator­y, and the US Navy, from which the personal informatio­n of more than 100,000 personnel was stolen.

Internatio­nally, the hackers are alleged to have broken into the computers of a major bank, three telecommun­ications or consumer electronic­s companies, mining and healthcare firms, and business consultanc­ies.

Beijing lashed out at the claims, the latest in a roiling dispute over cybersecur­ity that pits China against the US and its western allies.

“The United States is fabricatin­g facts, creating something from nothing, and unwarrante­dly denouncing China on cybersecur­ity issues,” foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said yesterday.

Beijing said it had lodged an official protest over the charges and warned the US to drop the prosecutio­n, “to avoid serious damage to the relations between the two countries”.

The Justice Department said the two alleged hackers, Zhu Hua and Zhang Shilong, worked for the APT10 group, which Washington, London and other allies say is backed by China’s Ministry of State Security. From at least 2006 to 2018, the APT10 Group “conducted extensive campaigns of intrusions into computer systems around the world”, the Justice Department said.

APT10 stole ‘hundreds of gigabytes’ of sensitive data and informatio­n from its targets, invading their systems through the hacked MSPs, it added. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia