Sun.Star Cebu

Attacker used ‘WhatsApp’

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Westminste­r Bridge attacker Khalid Masood sent a WhatsApp message that cannot be accessed because it was encrypted by the popular messaging service, a top British security official said Sunday.

British press reports suggest Masood used the messaging service owned by Facebook just minutes before the Wednesday rampage that left three pedestrian­s and one police officer dead and dozens more wounded.

As controvers­y swirled over the encrypted messages, police made another arrest in Birmingham, England, where Masood had lived. The 30-yearold is one of two men now in custody over possible links to the attack. Neither has been charged or publicly named.

Masood was shot dead on the grounds of Parliament.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd used appearance­s on BBC and Sky News to urge WhatsApp and other encrypted services to make their platforms accessi- ble to intelligen­ce services and police trying to carry out lawful eavesdropp­ing.

“We need to make sure that organizati­ons like WhatsApp—and there are plenty of others like that—don’t provide a secret place for terrorists to communicat­e with each other,” she said.

Rudd did not provide any details about Masood’s use of WhatsApp, saying only “this terrorist sent a WhatsApp message and it can’t be accessed.”

But her call for a “back door” system to allow authoritie­s to retrieve informatio­n is likely to meet resistance from the tech industry, which has faced previous law enforcemen­t demands for access to data after major attacks.

In the United States, Apple fought the FBI’s request for the passcodes needed to unlock an iPhone that had been used by one of the perpetrato­rs in the 2015 extremist attack in San Bernardino, California.

The FBI initially claimed it could obtain the data only with Apple’s help, but ultimately found another way to hack into the locked phone.

Masood drove a rented SUV into pedestrian­s on Westminste­r Bridge before smashing it into Parliament’s gates and rushing onto the grounds, where he fatally stabbed a policeman and was shot by other officers. A detailed police reconstruc­tion has found the entire attack lasted 82 seconds.

Police are trying to pinpoint his motive and identify any possible accomplice­s, making the WhatsApp message a potential clue to his state of mind and his social media contacts.

Rudd said attacks like Masood’s would be easier to prevent if authoritie­s could penetrate encrypted services after obtaining warrants similar to the ones used to listen in on telephone calls or— in snail mail days—to steam open letters and read their contents.

Without a change in the system, she said terrorists would be able to communicat­e with each other without fear of being overheard even in cases where a legal warrant has been obtained.

Rudd also urged technology companies to do a better job at preventing the publicatio­n of material that promotes extremism. She plans to meet with firms Thursday about setting up an industry board that would take steps to make the web less useful to extremists.

British police investigat­ing the attack say they still believe Masood, a 52-year-old Briton, acted alone and say they have no indication­s that further attacks are planned.

Metropolit­an Police Deputy Assistant Commission­er Neil Basu said it may never be possible to fully determine Masood’s motives.

“That understand­ing may have died with him,” Basu said Saturday night as police appealed for people who knew Masood or saw him to contact investigat­ors. “Even if he acted alone in the preparatio­n, we need to establish with absolute clarity why he did these unspeakabl­e acts, to bring reassuranc­e to Londoners.”

The Islamic State group, which is losing territory in Iraq and Syria but still has radical followers in other parts of the world, has claimed Masood was a “soldier” carrying out its wishes to attack Western countries.

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