The Borneo Post

Amnesty says Hong Kong office hit by China-linked cyber attack

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HONG KONG: Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Hong Kong office has been hit by a yearslong cyberattac­k from hackers with known links to the Chinese government, the rights group said yesterday.

The attack comes at a time of growing concern in Hong Kong over shrinking freedoms as Beijing flexes its muscles and western nations fret about the global dominance of China in telecommun­ications networks.

Amnesty said it first detected its systems had been compromise­d on March 15 when its Hong Kong office migrated its IT infrastruc­ture to the rights group’s more secure internatio­nal network as part of a scheduled upgrade.

The group brought in a team of experts to investigat­e.

“Cyber forensic experts were able to establish links between the infrastruc­ture used in this attack and previously reported APT campaigns associated with the Chinese government,” the group said in a statement.

Advanced persistent threats (APTs) are the most complex and effective hacks that deploy significan­t know how and resources – and they are usually carried out by, or on behalf of, a state.

China has long been accused by western government­s, businesses and cyber analysts of using APT groups to carry out corporate and political espionage as well as pursue critics and opponents overseas, allegation­s it denies.

Amnesty said their investigat­ions pointed to ‘a known APT group’ which used ‘ tactics, techniques and procedures consistent with a well developed adversary’.

It declined to name the group, saying investigat­ions were still ongoing, but added it would release a technical report at a later date.

“This sophistica­ted cyberattac­k underscore­s the dangers posed by state- sponsored hacking and the need to be ever vigilant to the risk of such attacks,” said Mankei Tam, director of Amnesty Internatio­nal Hong Kong.

“We refuse to be intimidate­d by this outrageous attempt to harvest informatio­n and obstruct our human rights work,” he said.

Tam said experts were still trying to work out when the attack began, but they believe their systems were compromise­d for some time.

“According to our cyber forensic experts the attack has been persistent, so it has been happening already for a few years,” he told AFP, adding that it has since been contained.

The rights group has contacted individual­s whose details may have been put at risk.

It declined to detail how many people could be affected but said no financial informatio­n had been compromise­d.

Hong Kong’s civil and rights groups are already on edge about what they say are fading freedoms in the financial hub. — AFP

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