Cryptocurrencies

North Korea slams accusations of crypto theft

Kim Jong-un’s regime has vehemently denied North Korea has been using an army of hackers to siphon off $2 billion from the world’s crypto exchanges and banks.

Officials from the sanctions committee of the United Nations Security Council recently pointed fingers directly at the secretive communist nation over the mass theft of huge sums of cryptocurrency, claiming the hacks were designed to fund Kim Jong-un’s nuclear weapons programme.

According to a Coin Rivet article for the Daily Express, Pyongyang’s state-governed news service – the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) – has hit back, branding the UN’s startling accusation as a “nasty game” and even comparing it to Nazi propaganda.

“The United States and other hostile forces are now spreading ill-hearted rumours that we have illegally forced the transfer of two billion US dollars needed for the development of WMD programs by involving cyber actors,” said the KCNA.

“A question being raised is on such fabricated information, unreasonably accusing us with no scientific ground, reflected even in the Midterm Report of the Panel of Experts of the Sanctions Committee against the DPRK, the UN Security Council, which we have never ever recognised.

‘Fabrication’

“The fabrication of such a sheer lie by the ringleaders of cybercrime and all other crimes is quite an absurd act aimed at re-enacting the same old trick as the Hitler fascist propagandists used to cling to, often saying ‘Tell a lie a hundred times and it will pass as a truth’.

“Such a fabrication by the hostile forces is nothing but a sort of nasty game aimed at tarnishing the image of the DPRK and finding justification for sanctions and a pressure campaign against it.”

The UN Security Council, however, maintains it is deeply concerned by North Korea’s weapons capabilities and is not backing down from accusations that Pyongyang is heavily involved in cybercrime. The specialist branch of the UN says it is investigating a string of apparent cyber-attacks on up to 17 countries by hackers from North Korea.

Earlier this year, in a Coin Rivet article for the Daily Express, one of the world’s leading cyber security experts labelled North Korea “an extremely dangerous cyber power on a mission to steal Bitcoin throughout the world”.

Renowned digital security figure Gareth Niblett revealed a massive hacking programme – codenamed ‘Lazarus’ – had infiltrated banks and crypto assets across the world, stealing at least $700 million.

“North Korea has been desperately trying to raise cash to combat international embargoes over recent years, and have resorted to stealing it since at least 2016,” he said.

“They go where the money is. It started with traditional banking systems around the world – Bank of Bangladesh and Banco de Chile for example – and, more recently, moving to using malware to mine cryptocurrency.

“North Korea is one of a number of growing global cyber powers building offensive cyber capabilities for military, intelligence, and economic aims.”

Gareth Niblett accuses North Korea of being on a dangerous crypto mission…

Darren Parkin

Darren Parkin is a highly experienced, award-winning editor with a background in daily newspapers. Once the UK’s youngest newspaper editor, he has spent more than three decades as a journalist, presenter and broadcaster. He was one of the first people to join the Coin Rivet team, and can often be found hosting, chairing or moderating cryptocurrency and blockchain events throughout the world. Away from the office, he is an outdoors instructor and adventurer. He recently set a world endurance record during a canoe expedition.

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