Orlando Sentinel

Hackers backing Islamists hit French TV network

Channels blacked out in retaliatio­n for Mideast strikes

- By Carol J. Williams Tribune Newspapers Je SuIS IS,”

Hackers acting in support of Islamic State extremists knocked out the global broadcast network of France’s TV5 early Thursday, then hijacked its website and social media to post warnings against French participat­ion in airstrikes against the militants in Iraq and Syria.

The computer system of TV5 Monde, whose Facebook page says it reaches 257 million households in 200 countries and territorie­s, was invaded by malware late Wednesday that took over the network’s transmissi­on server and blocked its satellite signal, network executives told French and internatio­nal media.

All 11 channels went black for three hours until prerecorde­d programmin­g was directed to fill viewers’ blank screens, said TV5 Monde Director General Yves Bigot.

“For the moment, we are unable to produce our own programs,” Bigot told France-24 television, calling the attack “unpreceden­ted in the history of television.” He said one television channel had been restored but it would be hours, possibly even days, before the entire network was functional due to the need to scour the systems for residual infection.

The hackers also temporaril­y controlled TV5’s Facebook page and other social media accounts. For two hours before the network recovered those sites, an image of a masked militant filled the page under the title “Cybercalip­hate” and the French phrase “a co-opting of the message of unity — Je suis Charlie (I am Charlie) — proclaimed by millions in France in solidarity with the 11 slain by Islamic extremists at the Charlie Hebdo satirical newspaper in Paris on Jan. 7.

Another post warned that French President Francois Hollande committed “an unforgivab­le mistake” by joining Western forces in attacking Islamic State, adding that the offensive is “a war that serves no purpose.”

Other material posted on the network’s social media while it was under the hackers’ control included identity cards and resumes of family members of French soldiers deployed with the internatio­nal coalition that has been waging airstrikes against Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria. The militants control about one-third of the territory of those two countries and have proclaimed a “caliphate” committed to invoking a harsh and medieval version of Islamic law.

“Soldiers of France, stay away from the Islamic State!” a message on the network’s Facebook page read overnight. “You have the chance to save your families, take advantage of it.”

More than 1,500 militant Muslims of French origin or residency are believed to be fighting with Islamic State, providing the group insight and contact with broad sectors of the French public.

Wassim Nasr, France-24’s expert on jihadi movements, observed that some of the hackers’ Arabic-language postings contained numerous spelling and grammar mistakes, suggesting that “the authors are not Arabic.”

The Paris prosecutor’s office announced that an investigat­ion had been launched to identify the perpetrato­rs of what it called a terrorist attack.

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls joined other government officials in showing solidarity with the hacked network by visiting the Paris headquarte­rs. He called the hacking an “unacceptab­le attack on the freedom of informatio­n and expression.”

“We are up against determined terrorists,” Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve told journalist­s, vowing that “we are determined to fight them.”

 ??  ?? France’s TV5 Monde’s Facebook page, above, was also hacked Thursday by people claiming allegiance to the Islamic State.
France’s TV5 Monde’s Facebook page, above, was also hacked Thursday by people claiming allegiance to the Islamic State.

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