Contents of Former UK Minister's Personal Email Account Stolen By Suspected Russian hackers: Sources

According to sources, the contents that the hackers are said to have accessed could number thousands of documents and emails

Suspected government-backed Russian hackers are said to have stolen the complete contents of former British trade minister Liam Fox's personal email account as a part of an attempt to influence the elections held in the UK in 2019.

The disclosure as made to Reuters by two sources is that the hackers had accessed Fox's account multiple times between July 12 and October 21 in 2019. According to the sources, the contents that the hackers believed to have accessed could number thousands of documents and emails.

Hacked Account Hosted By Online Email Service

The Kremlin did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the hacking of Fox's personal email. The sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity because a criminal investigation into the hack is underway, said the compromised account was hosted by online email service and was not an official government address.

Liam Fox
Liam Fox Wikimedia Commons

"It would be unusual for hackers to make off with just one email," one of the sources said. "You don't stop to read them in the middle of the heist." Reuters was not able to determine which online email provider was used, and representatives for Fox declined to comment on Tuesday.

A government spokeswoman referred to an earlier statement, which said: "There is an ongoing criminal investigation into how the documents were acquired, and it would be inappropriate to comment further at this point."

"But as you would expect, the Government has very robust systems in place to protect the IT systems of officials and staff." The British government does not explicitly bar the use of private email accounts for official business, but says all information must be handled in accordance with the law, including the Official Secrets Act.

Hacker
Representational Picture IANS

Email Account Identified As A Part of Investigation

Government guidance to ministers and their staff issued in 2013 says that in addition to official email systems "other forms of electronic communication may be used in the course of conducting Government business," but highlights a series of privacy and security factors that should be taken into account. The government spokeswoman declined to comment on whether any more recent guidance had been issued or if Fox had breached those rules.

The sources said Fox's private email account had been identified as part of an investigation into how the classified trade documents were leaked online, which was launched following a Reuters report that the activity mirrored a previously-identified Russian disinformation campaign.

In line with usual practice, investigators had to obtain Fox's permission to access the account and study the details of the hack, which involved a so-called "spear-phishing" message designed to trick targets into revealing their passwords, the sources said.

(With inputs from agencies)

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