Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Australia under cyberattac­ks from state actor

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SYDNEY (AFP) - Australia’s prime minister revealed yesterday his country was under a broad cyberattac­k from a “statebased actor” targeting government, public services and businesses, with suspicions falling on China.

Warning Australian­s of “specific risks” and an increased tempo of attacks, Scott Morrison told a press conference that a range of sensitive institutio­ns had been hit.

“This activity is targeting Australian organisati­ons across a range of sectors, including all levels of government, industry, political organisati­ons, education, health, essential service providers and operators of other critical infrastruc­ture,” he said.

Morrison levelled blame at a “sophistica­ted state-based cyber actor”, but declined to name the culprit, while saying that it could only come from one of a handful of states.

China, Iran, Israel, North Korea, Russia, the United States and a number of European countries are known to have developed advanced cyberwarfa­re capabiliti­es.

But suspicions immediatel­y fell on Beijing, which has clashed repeatedly with Canberra as it looks to increase the cost of Australia speaking out against Communist Party interests. Most recently Australia enraged China by calling for an investigat­ion into the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

But Canberra has also pushed back against what it describes as China’s economic “coercion”, covert influence campaigns and the use of technology companies like Huawei as a tool of intelligen­ce gathering and geopolitic­al leverage.

China has warned its students and tourists against going to Australia, slapped trade sanctions on Australian goods and sentenced an Australian citizen to death for drug traffickin­g.

Last year Australia’s parliament, political parties and universiti­es were targeted by state-backed cyberattac­ks, with China seen as the likely culprit.

Public broadcaste­r ABC cited “senior sources” confirming that China was believed to be behind today’s ongoing attacks as well.

Beijing has previously described such allegation­s as “irresponsi­ble” speculatio­n and an attempt to “smear” China.

Experts say attributio­n is often difficult, time-consuming and, if made public, could escalate tensions further.

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