The row over hacking attacks that appear to come from the Chinese People's
Liberation Army has widened after British officials claimed that UK systems have
been hacked.
Computers in the
Foreign
Office and other government departments were taken offline after an attack
that appeared to come from China, according to reports in
The
Guardian. One expert described it as a "constant ongoing problem".
Andrew
MacKinlay, a Labour member of the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, has
gone on record as saying that the attacks came from China and has accused the
government of covering up the scale of the problem.
"I am frustrated. This is clearly an area where the government has decided
not to comment. My questions were clearly unwelcome," he stated.
"This is happening against a backdrop where, on a whole range of foreign
policy issues, the British government is very weak. They seek to appease the
Chinese. They should be more robust and indignant."
The MP found that the
National
Infrastructure Coordination Centre had warned of the attacks in 2005 and
described the scale as "industrial". A similar attack took down internal House
of Commons systems last year.
Shadow Home Secretary David Davis said in a statement: "This is extremely
serious and would be even more so if the Chinese military was involved. It could
affect the security and privacy of every British citizen."
The news comes as more countries point to increasingly militant Chinese
hackers. The US and Germany have
complained of
attacks by China against government systems.
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