Oman Daily Observer

UK hospitals hit by cyber attacks

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LONDON: Several British hospitals were hit by cyber attacks on Friday, the country’s health service said, forcing some to divert ambulances to other clinics and urge people not to try to contact their doctors.

Sixteen individual organisati­ons within the health service, some of them responsibl­e for several hospitals each, had reported coming under attack, a spokesman for the National Health Service said.

“A number of NHS organisati­ons have reported to NHS Digital that they have been affected by a ransomware attack,” NHS Digital said in a statement. It was not clear if the disruption was linked to cyber attacks also reported on Friday on several major Spanish companies including telecom giant Telefonica.

The Spanish energy ministry said it had “confirmati­on of various cyber attacks targeting Spanish companies”, adding that the attackers used ransomware which blocks access to files until a ransom is paid.

Britain’s National Cyber Security Centre is assisting the investigat­ion into the UK incidents, apparently caused by a piece of malware called Wanna Decryptor, it said.

“At this stage we do not have any evidence that patient data has been accessed,” the NHS Digital statement said. “This attack was not specifical­ly targeted at the NHS and is affecting organisati­ons from across a range of sectors,” it added. Several individual health service trusts in England reported severe problems with their computer systems and instructed patients to avoid their hospitals except in emergencie­s.

A spokesman for Barts Health NHS Trust in London said it was experienci­ng “major IT disruption” and delays at all four of its hospitals.

“We have activated our major incident plan to make sure we can maintain the safety and welfare of patients,” the spokesman said.

“We are very sorry that we have to cancel routine appointmen­ts, and would ask members of the public to use other NHS services wherever possible. “Ambulances are being diverted to neighbouri­ng hospitals.”

Two employees at St Bartholome­w’s Hospital in London, which is part of Barts Health, said that all the computers in the hospital had been turned off. “We have been told that we need to shut down all the computers and even our Wi-Fi on our phones. No computers are currently working,” they said, speaking on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to speak to the press.

Britain’s main opposition Labour Party called on the government to be clear about how a nationwide ‘ransomware’ cyber attack hit the state-run NHS on Friday.

“This incident highlights the risk to data security within the modern health service and reinforces the need for cyber security to be at the heart of government planning,” Labour health spokesman Jonathan Ashworth said.

 ?? — AFP ?? A protester carries petrol in a plastic bottle attached to a metal rod during a service delivery protest on Friday in Matholesvi­lle, near Johannesbu­rg.
— AFP A protester carries petrol in a plastic bottle attached to a metal rod during a service delivery protest on Friday in Matholesvi­lle, near Johannesbu­rg.
 ?? — Reuters ?? An ambulance waits outside the emergency department at St Thomas’ Hospital in central London on Friday.
— Reuters An ambulance waits outside the emergency department at St Thomas’ Hospital in central London on Friday.

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