Sunday World (South Africa)

SA needs ‘global aid to probe Transnet attack’

State security has no capacity - IFP

- By Sandile Motha

While IT experts are working against the clock to determine who was behind the data sabotage at Transnet, opposition parties yesterday weighed in, saying the country’s intelligen­ce services should answer to allegation­s that a well-organised criminal syndicate was behind the cyberattac­k.

The attack brought to a halt Transnet’s cargo-moving technology, which resulted in cargo ships getting stranded at the country’s ports.

The state-owned freight company’s division subsequent­ly declared a force majeure ( event beyond control) that is expected to be lifted tomorrow after major ports reported that operations were gradually returning to normal.

The security intrusion and sabotage severely hit container terminals in the usually bustling Durban harbour and port of Cape Town.

The IFP said the government should consider the assistance of an internatio­nal organisati­on to identify the key role players behind the attack on one of the lifebloods of the country’s economy.

“This is a clear indication that state security is not on top of crime. There is just no capacity in the intelligen­ce apparatus, which renders the country vulnerable to not only crime, but terrorism as well ,” said IFP acting spokespers­on Narend Singh. The DA said there was more to the Transnet cyberattac­k than meets the eye.

“This is a very serious threat because Transnet IT systems are connected to both SA Revenue Service and customs. It appears that there is a serious and a targeted strategy to destabilis­e the country.

“The response from the minister in charge of public enterprise­s is mild and vague, we need accountabi­lity from the intelligen­ce services,” said DA spokespers­on on public enterprise­s Ghaleb Cachalia.

He added that his party will, through the Promotion of Access to Informatio­n Act, call for State Security Minister Ayanda Dlodlo to make public the report on what the country’s intelligen­ce had gathered on the cyberattac­k.

“We will force the state security minister to make the security assessment public. If there is none, we also need answers as to why they did not know about the threat. It cannot be business as usual, heads must roll,” Cachalia said. It has since emerged that an internatio­nal cybercrime syndicate might have been behind the collapse of the Transnet online data after the alleged hackers left an online message demanding a ransom.

There are also fears that the hackers might also attempt to collapse the national IT infrastruc­ture.

 ??  ?? The attack affected operations at port of Durban. /Transnet
The attack affected operations at port of Durban. /Transnet

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