Business World

UN experts investigat­e 58 cyberattac­ks by North Korea

- Reuters

UNITED NATIONS — United Nations (UN) sanctions monitors are investigat­ing dozens of suspected cyberattac­ks by North Korea that raked in $3 billion to help it further develop its nuclear weapons program, according to excerpts of an unpublishe­d UN report reviewed by Reuters.

“The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) continued to flout Security Council sanctions,” a panel of independen­t sanctions monitors reported to a Security Council committee, using North Korea’s formal name.

“It further developed nuclear weapons and produced nuclear fissile materials, although its last known nuclear test took place in 2017,” wrote the monitors, who also said Pyongyang had continued ballistic missile launches, put a satellite into orbit and added a “tactical nuclear attack submarine” to its arsenal.

North Korea has long been banned from conducting nuclear tests and ballistic missile launches by the 15-member Security Council. Since 2006, it has been subject to UN sanctions, which the council has repeatedly strengthen­ed to try and cut off funding for its weapons of mass destructio­n (WMD) developmen­t.

“The panel is investigat­ing 58 suspected DPRK cyberattac­ks on cryptocurr­ency-related companies between 2017 and 2023, valued at approximat­ely $3 billion, which reportedly help fund DPRK’s WMD developmen­t,” the monitors wrote.

North Korea’s mission to the United Nations in New York did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the report by the sanctions monitors. Pyongyang has previously denied allegation­s of hacking or other cyberattac­ks.

The UN report is due to be released publicly later this month or early next month, diplomats said.

North Korean hacking groups subordinat­e to the Reconnaiss­ance General Bureau (RGB) — Pyongyang’s primary foreign intelligen­ce agency — reportedly continued with a high number of cyber attacks, the sanctions monitors said.

“Trends include DPRK targeting of defense companies and supply chains, and increasing­ly sharing infrastruc­ture and tools,” according to the monitors, who report twice a year to the 15-member Security Council.

LUXURY GOODS

Any further action against North Korea by the council is unlikely as it had been deadlocked for several years on the issue. China and Russia instead want the sanctions to be eased to convince Pyongyang to return to denucleari­zation talks.

Moscow and Pyongyang also vowed last year to deepen military relations. The US has accused North Korea of supplying weapons to Russia for its war in Ukraine, which North Korea and Russia have denied.

“The panel is investigat­ing reports from Member States about supplies by DPRK of convention­al arms and munitions in contravent­ion of sanctions,” the sanctions monitors wrote.

The isolated Asian nation imposed a strict lockdown amid the coronaviru­s pandemic that slashed its trade and aid access, but it slowly began to re-emerge last year.

“Trade continues to recover. The 2023 overall recorded trade volume surpassed the total for 2022, accompanie­d by the reappearan­ce of a large variety of foreign consumer goods, some of which could be classified as luxury items,” the sanctions monitors wrote. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines