Who is hacking Malaysia Airlines on MH370?

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Written by Linda Hohnholz

The successful hacking attack affected some 30 computers belonging to officials in the Malaysia Airlines, the Civil Aviation Department and the National Security Council, Malaysian newspaper the Star

The successful hacking attack affected some 30 computers belonging to officials in the Malaysia Airlines, the Civil Aviation Department and the National Security Council, Malaysian newspaper the Star reported on Wednesday.

A targeted phishing attack on a handful of Malaysian officials involved in investigating the disappearance of flight MH370 in March reportedly gave the perpetrators, presumably of Chinese origin, access to a trove of classified material.

The malware was posing as a PDF attachment to a new article emailed to the senior officials on March 9, a day after the Malaysian Airlines Boeing 777 disappeared while flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

Before Malaysian cyber security experts found and closed the breach a trove of documents, including classified ones, were funneled to an IP address located in China. The malware sent the stolen data by email, which alerted the Malaysians, said Amirudin Abdul Wahab, chief executive at CyberSecurity Malaysia, a governmental agency within the Science, Technology and Innovation Ministry.

โ€œThose email contained confidential data from the officialsโ€™ computer, including minutes of meetings and classified documents,โ€ he said as cited by the newspaper. โ€œSome of these were related to the MH370 investigation.โ€

The agency believes that the hack was related to the MH370 disappearance. There were 153 Chinese nationals on board the missing plane.

โ€œAt that time, there were some people accusing the government of not releasing crucial information,โ€ Amirudin said adding that the Malaysian government eventually released everything it had on the incident.

The Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 carrying 239 people disappeared on March 8 over the Indian Ocean. A rescue operation unprecedented in scope and cost was launched to find the plane, but not even debris from the aircraft was discovered.

The frustration over lack of news about the plane sparked occasional protests in China, as people were accusing the Malaysian government of not doing enough to find their loved ones.

There are a number of conspiracy theories regarding the disappearance floating around, claiming that MH370 was hijacked for nefarious purposes by a government, a highly-trained criminal group or a similarly dangerous perpetrator.

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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