The Philippine Star

Bangladesh claims SWIFT responsibl­e for $81 M heist

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A Bangladesh government­appointed panel investigat­ing the theft of $81 million from the country’s central bank has found that SWIFT, the internatio­nal banking payments network, committed a number of mistakes in connecting up a local network, the panel head said on Sunday.

“We have shown that SWIFT made a number of errors that made it easy for the hackers,” Mohammed Farashuddi­n, a former governor of the Bangladesh­i central bank, told reporters.

He said SWIFT, a cooperativ­e owned by 3,000 financial institutio­ns, could not escape responsibi­lity as it had connected its network to the central bank’s new real time gross settlement (RTGS) system launched in October for domestic transactio­ns.

“SWIFT is responsibl­e for the heist of Bangladesh Bank as it approached the central bank for the installati­on of RTGS real time gross settlement,” Farashuddi­n said.

SWIFT has already rejected allegation­s made by Dhaka that it had been at fault, saying its financial messaging system remained secure and had not been breached by the hackers during the attack on Bangladesh Bank.

The hackers broke into the computer systems of the central bank in early February and issued instructio­ns through the SWIFT network to transfer $ 951 million of its deposits held at the New York Federal Reserve Bank to accounts in the Philippine­s and Sri Lanka.

Most of the transactio­ns were blocked but four went through amounting to $ 81 million, prompting allegation­s by Bangladesh­i officials that both the Fed and SWIFT had failed to detect the fraud.

Bangladesh­i police and a bank official said earlier this month that the central bank became more vulnerable to hackers when technician­s from SWIFT connected the new bank transactio­n system to SWIFT messaging three months before the cyber theft.

The local Daily Star newspaper quoted Farashuddi­n as saying that SWIFT failed to implement 13 security measures in the installati­on of the system.

Farashuddi­n is due to submit his final report to the government in the next few days.

A spokeswoma­n for SWIFT said she had no immediate comment to make.

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