Manila Bulletin

Australia warns SE Asia of high-tech terror threat

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SYDNEY (AFP) - Australia on Saturday warned the use of encrypted messaging apps to plan terrorist attacks was the greatest threat faced by intelligen­ce agencies in modern times and urged a "united and cohesive" response.

Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton told an ASEAN-Australia special summit in Sydney that the use of the "dark web" by extremists and other criminals was a spiraling problem.

"The use of encrypted messaging apps by terrorists and criminals is potentiall­y the most significan­t degradatio­n of intelligen­ce capability in modern times," he said.

Dutton added at the meeting of Southeast Asian leaders that the

only way to deal with the threat, and the increasing use of the Internet by groups like Islamic State to radicalize and recruit new members, was together.

"While our nations are focused on countering the ongoing threat of terrorism domestical­ly, it would be a mistake to approach the problem from a purely national perspectiv­e," he said.

"Terrorism and violent extremism transcend national borders.”

United regional effort "Countering the threat requires a united and cohesive regional effort involving coordinati­on between our respective national security and law enforcemen­t agencies."

Canberra is already helping Southeast Asian states choke terrorist financing and counter violent extremism.

The problem has been exacerbate­d by jihadists now being forced out of Syria and Iraq with the Islamic State caliphate mostly crushed.

The issue was driven home last year when pro-Islamic State militants seized the southern Philippine city of Marawi, with Australia aiding Manila to win it back.

Pool cyber intelligen­ce A memorandum of understand­ing will be issued at the summit later Saturday, reportedly with an agreement to pool cyber intelligen­ce and police resources across the region for the first time.

The Australian newspaper said it would include a regional digital forensics taskforce and uniform criminal legislativ­e frameworks to secure prosecutio­ns.

Australia has suffered six terror attacks in recent years and disrupted 14 more, including a plot to bring down a plane departing Sydney.

In response, Canberra has consolidat­ed key functions like national security, immigratio­n, counter-terrorism, cyber-security, and border protection under a newly-created Home Affairs department, headed by Dutton.

He said that to address the issue of apps which allow extremists to operate clandestin­ely, Canberra planned to introduce legislatio­n to strengthen agencies' ability to adapt to encryption.

This will include making companies that provide communicat­ions services and devices obliged to assist when asked, while also making the use of surveillan­ce devices and computer network exploitati­on by authoritie­s easier.

ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, with Australia a dialogue partner since 1974.

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