Peru strengthens the digital security of its Armed Forces in the face of hacking threats

Peru strengthens the digital security of its Armed Forces in the face of hacking threats

The announcement comes two days after a Chilean media revealed that a group of hackers, known as Guacamaya, stole more than 283,000 emails from the Army and the Joint Command of the Peruvian Armed Forces. This information was confirmed by the Peruvian newspaper La República, which reported that the National Intelligence Directorate (DINI) had recognized this intrusion.

“These are attacks of intrusion and theft of information against state military institutions,” says a report from the digital security team of the DINI, quoted by said newspaper. In total, Guacamaya gained access to 105 gigabytes of secret information between 2018 and 2022, they said. However, the Ministry of Defense did not officially confirm the computer theft.

In his statement, however, he indicated that “a forensic analysis of what happened is being carried out and all access has been restricted” to the networks of the armed institutions “while the technical specialists carry out the corresponding tasks.”

On September 22, the Chilean government ordered an investigation into a “security flaw” detected in the emails of the military leadership, a case that even led to the resignation of the head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Guillermo Paiva.

Eight days later, the Mexican government acknowledged that a group of hackers obtained files from the Army with confidential information, such as data on the health of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

The intrusion into the emails of military and police institutions in Peru, Chile, Colombia, Mexico and El Salvador is part of an operation to spread information about alleged illegal activities such as the persecution and espionage of popular movements, environmental activists and social leaders, he said. The Republic, which cited members of Guacamaya.

Guatemala also recognized this Saturday a hack but to the technological infrastructure of its consular network, as reported today by the Guatemalan Foreign Minister, Mario Búcaro, which led to the system being temporarily suspended.

Source: Ambito

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