Manila Standard

US, UK, NZ accuse China of cyber attacks

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WELLINGTON, New Zealand – The United States, Britain and New Zealand have accused Beijing-backed cyber groups of being behind a series of attacks against lawmakers and key democratic institutio­ns -- allegation­s that prompted angry Chinese denials.

In rare and detailed public accusation­s against China -- Washington, London and Wellington described a series of cyber breaches over the last decade or more, in what appeared to be a concerted effort to hold Beijing accountabl­e.

The US Justice Department charged seven Chinese nationals over what it said was a 14year “prolific global hacking operation” designed to aid China’s “economic espionage and foreign intelligen­ce objectives.”

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

Washington said a unit, dubbed APT31, was behind the attacks, describing it as a “cyberespio­nage program” run by China’s powerful Ministry of State Security out of the central city of Wuhan.

The hackers gained access to “email accounts, cloud storage accounts, and telephone call records” the Justice Department said, monitoring some accounts for “years”.

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

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