The Philippine Star

• UN: Cybercrime soars amid pandemic

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UNITED NATIONS (AP) – The UN disarmamen­t chief warned Friday that cybercrime is on the rise, with a 600 percent increase in malicious emails during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Izumi Nakamitsu told an informal meeting of the UN Security Council that the coronaviru­s crisis is moving the world toward increased technologi­cal innovation and online collaborat­ion. But she said “there have also been worrying reports of (cyber) attacks against health care organizati­ons and medical research facilities worldwide.”

The high representa­tive for disarmamen­t affairs said growing digital dependency has increased the vulnerabil­ity to cyberattac­ks, and it is estimated that one such attack takes place every 39 seconds.

According to the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union, she said, nearly 90 countries are still only at the early stages of making commitment­s to cybersecur­ity.

Nakamitsu said the threat from misusing informatio­n and communicat­ions technology “is urgent.”

But she said there is also good news, pointing to some global progress at the United Nations to address the threats by a group of government expert who developed 11 voluntary non-binding norms of responsibl­e state behavior in the use of such technology.

Estonia’s Prime Minister Juri Ratas, whose country holds the Security Council presidency and organized Friday’s meeting, said the need for “a secure and functionin­g cyberspace” is more pressing than ever. He condemned cyberattac­ks targeting hospitals, medical research facilities and other infrastruc­ture, especially during the pandemic.

“Those attacks are unacceptab­le,” Ratas said. “It will be important to hold the offenders responsibl­e for their behavior.”

Russia did not attend the informal council meeting broadcast online, which was the centerpiec­e of Estonia’s council presidency. The other 14 council nations did, along with about 50 other nations that spoke.

Russia’s UN Mission said in a statement on its website that it did not attend because Estonia, the UK and the US violated “the establishe­d practice” that all council members attend informal meetings “regardless of whether they approve or disapprove its topic.”

The three countries did not attend a Russian-sponsored informal meeting on Crimea on Thursday. All three oppose Russia’s seizure and annexation of Crimea from Ukraine.

In March, the US, UK, and Estonia accused Russia’s military intelligen­ce of conducting cyberattac­ks against the government and media websites in Georgia, calling the attacks part of “a continuing pattern of reckless ... cyberopera­tions against a number of countries” that “clearly contradict Russia’s attempts to claim it is a responsibl­e actor in cyberspace.”

Estonia was the target of a massive three-week cyberattac­k during a dispute with Russia in 2007 over Estonia’s removal of the Bronze Soldier Soviet war memorial from the center of the capital, Tallinn. The attack disabled the websites of government ministries, political parties, newspapers, banks and companies.

Since then, Estonia has built its cyber defenses and become one of the most wired societies in Europe and a pioneer in the developmen­t of “e-government.” Being highly dependent on computers, it is also highly vulnerable to cyberattac­k.

Russia has taken on the issue of cybercrime at the United Nations,

and won General Assembly approval in December for a resolution that will start the process of drafting a new internatio­nal treaty to combat cybercrime over objections from the European Union, the US and others. They said it would undermine internatio­nal cooperatio­n to combat cybercrime.

“We have witnessed malicious cyber activity that appears designed to undermine the United States and our internatio­nal partners’ efforts to protect, assist, and inform the public during this global pandemic,” Acting US Deputy Ambassador Cherith Norman Chalet told Friday’s meeting.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A smartphone displays “Cyber Attack” in front of an easyJet logo.
REUTERS A smartphone displays “Cyber Attack” in front of an easyJet logo.

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