The Sun (Malaysia)

China-linked cyberattac­ks not ruled out as M’sia reviews deals: Firm

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KUALA LUMPUR: Chinese statespons­ored hackers may be targeting companies and state agencies in Malaysia as it looks to review several major projects linked to China’s Belt and Road Initiative, cyber security firm FireEye Inc said yesterday.

Malaysian Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, who took power after an election win in May, will be in China on Friday seeking to renegotiat­e and possibly cancel billions of dollars worth of Chineseinv­ested projects authorised by his predecesso­r, Datuk Seri Najib Abdul Razak.

China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), unveiled in 2013, aims to develop a network of land and sea links with Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Africa.

FireEye said it had found indication­s that cyber espionage activities were increasing throughout Southeast Asia, as China-based groups and others sought to gain informatio­n on BRI projects and deals.

Malaysia’s recent political changes and its reassessme­nt of China-backed projects put it at heightened risk of such activity, FireEye’s head of global intelligen­ce operations, Sandra Joyce, told a media briefing.

“Malaysia is looking more and more like a typical target of Chinese state-sponsored cyber activity,” she said.

“As Chinese investment­s continue to be scrutinise­d, that is going to be a motivator for groups ... to gain more intelligen­ce and informatio­n on the future of these projects.”

China’s foreign ministry did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. China routinely denies accusation­s of involvemen­t in hacking and says it is a main victim of it.

The Malaysian prime minister’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment, while a spokesman for the foreign ministry declined to comment.

Joyce said Malaysian targets could include any company or agency involved in a US$20 billion (RM81.8 billion) East Coast Rail Link project. The 688km project, linking Malaysia’s west coast with ports in the east, has been suspended pending discussion­s over pricing and graft allegation­s.

Mahathir’s government also halted work on two projects worth more than US$2.3 billion awarded to the China Petroleum Pipeline Bureau.

Joyce said its observatio­ns on Malaysia were in keeping with developmen­ts in other countries with major BRI interests such as Belarus, which has been targeted by a Chinese group called Roaming Tiger.

FireEye said in July that a China-based group identified as TEMP.Periscope had interfered in a general election in Cambodia, breaching systems used by several Cambodian state agencies and political entities. – Reuters

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