Taiwan Claims China Behind Cyberattacks on Government Agencies and Emails of Officials

The Chinese government routinely denies the involvement in hacking and claims it punishes those who do it

Taiwan mentioned on Wednesday that hacking groups linked to China had attacked at least 10 government agencies and some 6,000 email accounts of the government officials in an 'infiltration' for stealing important data.

Democratic Taiwan has been asking the people to be alert for what the officials state "omnipresent infiltration" from China, which involves Beijing-backed media campaigns to cyberattacks, against the island, which China considers its territory.

"Chinese hacking groups have been infiltrating government agencies and their information service providers for a long time," said the deputy director of the Taiwan Investigation Bureau's Cyber Security Investigation Office, Liu Chia-zung. "They were aiming to acquire important government documents and data," Liu told reporters. "Some government data might have been leaked. This has posed a great threat."

Taiwan Claims Chinese Hackers Attacked Government Agencies

Taiwan
A double rainbow is seen behind Taiwanese flag during the National Day celebrations in Taipei, Taiwan, October 10, 2017. Reuters

The attacks, which started as early as 2018, targeted at least 10 government agencies and the email accounts of some 6,000 officials, Liu's office said, adding it had not been able to identify what data has been stolen as the hackers had concealed their tracks. Among those who were attacked and infiltrated by two Chinese hacking groups were at least four Taiwan tech companies that had been providing information services to the government, the office said.

China's Taiwan Affairs Office did not respond to a request for comment. The Chinese government routinely denies involvement in hacking and says it punishes those who do it. Liu said Taiwan believed the two hacking groups involved, Blacktech and Taidoor, were backed by the Chinese Communist Party. They targeted loopholes in the systems provided by the Taiwan government's information service providers, he said.

Government agencies should increase scrutiny of their providers, Liu said. He said his office was investigating service supply chains to see if any Taiwan companies or individuals have worked with the Chinese hackers. News of the hacking comes during a period of heightened tension between the island and China. China has stepped up its military activity near Taiwan and has never renounced the use of force to bring it under its control.

(With agency inputs)

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