Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Beijing slams cyber spying accusation­s

Washington claims that Chinese hacking group APT31 is part of a cyberespio­nage program of the Ministry of State Security

- WITH AFP

China has slammed the United States, United Kingdom and New Zealand for accusing it of cyber attacks on the three countries designed to aid Beijing’s “economic espionage and foreign intelligen­ce objectives.”

Beijing on Tuesday insisted it “opposes and cracks down on all forms of cyberattac­ks” and accused the US of its own campaign of cyber-espionage.

“Relevant Chinese cybersecur­ity agencies have released a series of reports on the US government’s cyberattac­ks against China and other countries, but the US government has always played dumb,” foreign ministry spokespers­on Lin Jian said.

Washington said a unit, dubbed APT31, was behind the hackings over the last decade under a “cyberespio­nage program” run by China’s powerful Ministry of State Security out of the central city of Wuhan.

US Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco on Monday said the campaign involved more than 10,000 emails being sent, targeting American and foreign-based businesses, politician­s, candidates for elected office and journalist­s.

Seven alleged hackers have been charged for their roles in gaining access to “email accounts, cloud storage accounts and telephone call records” the Justice Department said, monitoring some accounts for “years.”

APT31 and APT40

London said that from 2021 to 2022 the same APT31 group had targeted UK lawmakers’ accounts, including many who were critical of Beijing’s policies.

Two individual­s and one company linked to APT31 have been hit with UK sanctions.

In a parallel announceme­nt, New Zealand on Tuesday said its Parliament­ary Counsel Office, which drafts and publishes laws, had been compromise­d around the same period.

New Zealand, normally one of China’s strongest backers in the West, blamed the Chinese “statespons­ored group” APT40 for the attack.

Recently elected center-right Prime Minister Christophe­r Luxon admitted it was a “big step” to blame the cyber attack on China, his country’s biggest trade partner.

New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters said he had instructed diplomats to “speak today to the Chinese Ambassador, to lay out our position and express our concerns.”

“That conversati­on has now taken place,” he said. Britain and the US operate vast cyber operations of their own, although rarely acknowledg­e them in public.

The two nations, along with New Zealand, Australia and Canada, are part of the FiveEyes intelligen­ce sharing network that Beijing claims compiles and disseminat­es false informatio­n about threats from Chinese hackers.

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