Ukraine's mobile phone infrastructure is under attack: with equipment
installed in Russian-controlled Crimea interfering with the phones of
members of parliament, a senior Ukrainian government official alleges.
The
head of Ukraine's SBU security service told a press conference on
Tuesday that the attack has been running for at least two days.
"I confirm that an IP-telephonic attack is under way on mobile
phones of members of Ukrainian parliament for the second day in row,"
Valentyn Nalivaichenko told the new conference, Reuters reports.
Equipment installed within Ukrtelecom networks in the Crimea is blocking the phones of Nalivaichenko and his deputies, he said.
"The
security services are now seeking to restore at least the security of
communications," according to the security chief. "All state information
security systems were unprepared for such a brazen violation of the
law."
AFP also reports
that Russian forces have also severed internet connections between the
Crimean peninsula and the rest of Ukraine. Unidentified individuals
reportedly seized local offices of state-owned telecommunications
service provider Ukrtelecom, before cutting phone and Internet cables.
The actions have severely degraded communication links.
Ukrainian naval communications stations around the port city of Sevastopol and power lines there have been sabotaged, AFP added.
Two Crimean government web portals were also offline, although the reason for this outage remains unconfirmed.
It's not all one way traffic. The website of the Russia Today news service was defaced by hackers
for a short time on Saturday with the headlines of news articles
changed so that references to “Russia” and “Russians" were replaced with
the words “Nazi” and “Nazis”.
Russian forces seized strategic
locations on the Crimean peninsula last week after a popular uprising in
Kiev ousted pro-Russian President Yanukovych. Local militia set up
roadblocks between Crimea, which has an ethnic Russian majority, and the
rest of the Ukraine.
The use by Russia of electronic warfare
against the Ukraine in the midst of escalating tensions within the
country follows the pattern of earlier conflicts between Russia and its
immediate neighbours.
For example, the military conflicts on the
ground between Georgia and Russia back in 2008 over break-away regions
of South Ossetia and Abkhazia - which have since become Russian
protectorates - was accompanied by denial of service attacks and website
defacements.
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