The Daily Telegraph

Royal Mail restarts overseas deliveries after cyber attack

- By Matt Oliver

ROYAL Mail has resumed internatio­nal deliveries for the first time following a cyber attack that crippled the postal service’s computer systems.

The company said it had finally begun sending letters and parcels abroad again, albeit in limited volumes, after a full week of paralysis.

Critical systems at Royal Mail’s internatio­nal business were compromise­d on Jan 10 when hackers affiliated with the criminal group Lockbit launched a cyber attack, disabling a digital service used to document mail going abroad.

But yesterday, the company said it was trialling “workaround­s” to send some parcels to France, Germany and the Netherland­s, while letters that did not require customs declaratio­ns were being despatched as well.

A spokesman said that Royal Mail is focusing on clearing a backlog of mail that has built up since the disruption began, after at least half a million items became stuck in limbo last week.

Customers are being told they can now post internatio­nal letters that do not require customs declaratio­ns again but the company still advises against posting new internatio­nal parcels for the time being.

It comes just a day after Simon Thompson, its chief executive, was unable to tell MPS when normal services would resume during an appearance in front of a parliament­ary committee.

Last week The Daily Telegraph revealed Russia-linked Lockbit gang members had successful­ly hacked label machines at Royal Mail facilities, causing them to print ransom notes reading: “Your data are stolen and encrypted.”

Yesterday a Royal Mail spokesman said: “Following the recent cyber incident, we are trialling operationa­l workaround­s and have started moving limited volumes of export parcels.

“While we trial these operationa­l workaround­s, we continue to ask customers not to submit any new export parcels into the network.

“Our initial focus will be to clear mail that has already been processed and is waiting to be despatched.”

Royal Mail called in police and experts from the National Cyber Security Centre, part of spy agency GCHQ, to help deal with the fallout.

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