Arab News

Saudi Arabia faces obstacles in combating ‘criminal use of ICT’

Importance of internatio­nal legislatio­n in fight against cybercrime stressed

- SPA New York

Saudi Arabia has said it is important to consider ways to adopt internatio­nal legislatio­n to combat cybercrime.

The Kingdom's delegate made this point during a speech at the general debate on combating the use of informatio­n and communicat­ion technology (ICT) for criminal purposes, which was held at the UN headquarte­rs in New York. Mohammed bin Essam Khashan, third secretary of the Kingdom's permanent delegation to the UN, said that the Kingdom passed a law against cybercrime­s two years ago that regulates the use of technology and communicat­ion by protecting individual­s from any attempt to hack into their personal identifica­tion and steal their personal informatio­n.

The law protects against crimes of extortion, defamation and racist abuse, and also protects companies from any attempt to hack into their websites or change their content, he said.

Khashan said that there are obstacles facing the Kingdom in combating the use of ICT for criminal purposes, as the weak cooperatio­n of digital platform companies with legal and law enforcemen­t authoritie­s around the world has led to a lack of preventive and proactive policies. He also noted that the absence of digital identity in the virtual world, the use of identifier­s, fictitious data and the impersonat­ion of other persons on the internet, as well as the multiplici­ty and diversity of legislatio­n and laws adopted by various countries have made it harder to reach and enforce legal action.

“All of the above made it easier for the perpetrato­rs of these crimes to exploit the legal gaps between regions and states, and made it difficult for government­s and security agencies to track and arrest them,” he added.

“My country believes that it is necessary to urge countries to establish internal laws that take into account privacy and national sovereignt­y, on one hand, and contribute to the fight against cybercrime and the tracking of criminals at the regional and internatio­nal level, on the other hand,” he said.

He said: “My country greatly supports the transition to digitizati­on in various fields, where it does so by eliminatin­g paperwork in government department­s, and by establishi­ng effective electronic platforms to provide services to individual­s and companies. The Kingdom believes that the exchange of convention­al currencies with digital currencies makes it easier for criminal and terrorist groups to hide many of their financial transactio­ns on the internet, as there is no current legal framework that regulates these financial transactio­ns and ensures that their movements are monitored.

“For any laws that are legislated or applied in the real world, it is necessary to create the equivalent in the virtual world. We, the internatio­nal community, through the relevant agencies should increase cooperatio­n and support all efforts to do so, by raising awareness of communitie­s regarding the safe use of technology, highlighti­ng the methods used by criminal and terrorist groups active on the internet, and working hard to develop the competenci­es and qualificat­ions of informatio­n security workers through dedicated training programs,” he said.

 ?? SPA ?? Mohammed bin Essam Khashan, third secretary of the Kingdom’s permanent delegation to the UN, speaks during the general debate on combating the use of informatio­n and communicat­ion technology (ICT) for criminal purposes, in
New York.
SPA Mohammed bin Essam Khashan, third secretary of the Kingdom’s permanent delegation to the UN, speaks during the general debate on combating the use of informatio­n and communicat­ion technology (ICT) for criminal purposes, in New York.

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