Malta Independent

Swedish sports body hacked by Russians, officials say

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The organizati­on that oversees Sweden's national sports federation­s was hacked by Russian military intelligen­ce in 2017-18, officials said Tuesday, in a databreach­ing campaign that also affected some of the world's leading sporting bodies, including FIFA and the World Anti-Doping Agency.

Swedish prosecutor­s said the "repeated and comprehens­ive breaches" of the Swedish Sports Confederat­ion by GRU resulted in athletes' personal details, such as medical records, being accessed and that informatio­n being published by Swedish media.

The hacking was discovered following an investigat­ion by the Swedish Security Service in cooperatio­n with the security services of other countries. But the investigat­ion has been discontinu­ed because "the necessary preconditi­ons for taking legal proceeding­s abroad or extraditio­n to Sweden are lacking," public prosecutor Mats Ljungqvist said.

The data breaches were said to have taken place from December 2017 to May 2018. At that time, Sweden was putting together a bid to host the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Among the athletes who had private informatio­n accessed was women's national team soccer player Olivia Schough.

"This is a serious crime against humanity and values where personal informatio­n that can be sensitive was spread without the slightest thought about how it can affect individual­s," said Bjorn Eriksson, the chairman of the Swedish Sports Confederat­ion.

Ljungqvist said the data breaches were part of a larger, systematic campaign by Russian hackers against internatio­nal sports organizati­ons, such as FIFA, WADA, the United States Anti-Doping Agency and the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport. The United States issued indictment­s in 2018 for alleged Russian hacking of Olympic and soccer bodies.

The hacking campaign began after Russia's state-backed doping program was exposed in 2015.

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