Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Ukraine hackers disrupt Russia’s defense server

Cyberattac­k cuts communicat­ion between battlefiel­d units and defense ministry

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KYIV (AFP) — Ukraine said Tuesday that it had carried out a successful cyberattac­k that knocked out a server used by Russia’s defense ministry, temporaril­y disrupting communicat­ions for military units.

“As a result of the cyberattac­k, the exchange of informatio­n between the units of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation, which used the indicated server located in Moscow, was stopped,” Ukraine’s GUR military intelligen­ce unit said in a statement.

It added that the cyberattac­k was “ongoing.” Agence France-Presse was unable to verify the claim, and Russian officials had not immediatel­y responded to the alleged hacking.

But Russian authoritie­s did announce Tuesday that a “technical problem” had shut down several internet sites in the country, though the defense ministry was not mentioned.

Russia’s digital developmen­t ministry said the problem was linked to “Domain Name System Security Extensions” and was resolved by Tuesday evening, though “disruption­s” could persist “for a certain time.”

Civilian compensati­on

Meanwhile, The United Nations’ top court will hand down its verdict on Wednesday in a case brought by Ukraine against Russia for alleged “terrorism financing” and “racial discrimina­tion” after its annexation of Crimea in 2014.

Kyiv has accused Moscow of being a “terrorist state” whose support for pro-Russian separatist­s in eastern Ukraine was a harbinger of the full-fledged 2022 invasion.

It wants Russia to compensate all civilians caught up in the conflict, as well as victims from Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, which was shot down over eastern Ukraine.

The case predates Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. The Internatio­nal Court of

Justice will decide on Friday whether it has jurisdicti­on to rule in a separate case over that war.

Russia is also in the dock for alleged breaches of an internatio­nal convention on racial discrimina­tion due to its treatment of the Tatar minority and Ukrainian speakers in occupied Crimea.

During hearings on the case, Alexander Shulgin, Russia’s ambassador to the Netherland­s, accused Ukraine of “blatant lies and false accusation­s... even to this court.”

Top Ukrainian diplomat Anton Korynevych retorted that Russia was trying to “wipe us off the map.”

“Beginning in 2014, Russia illegally occupied Crimea and then engaged in a campaign of cultural erasure, taking aim at ethnic Ukrainians and Crimean Tatars,” Korynevych said.

The case started in 2017 and has seen lengthy exchanges in the ICJ’s Great Hall of Justice, plus thousands of pages of documents submitted to the judges.

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