15, May 2018
Mexican banks hacked, millions stolen 0
Hundreds of millions of pesos have been illegally withdrawn from several Mexican banks in possible cyber attacks in recent weeks, Mexican officials have announced.
Hackers sent hundreds of false orders to transfer funds from banks, including No. 2 Banorte, to fake accounts in other banks, and accomplices then emptied the accounts in cash withdrawals in scores of branch offices, two sources close to a Mexican government investigation of the matter said.
One source said the thieves transferred more than 300 million pesos ($15.4 million) while the El Financiero newspaper reported that around 400 million pesos had been stolen.
It was not clear how much of the money transferred was later withdrawn in cash.
Speaking to reporters late on Monday, Mexico’s Central Bank Governor Alejandro Diaz de Leon described the attacks as unprecedented, expressing hope that unspecified measures being taken would stop similar future incidents.
“There’s no evidence that would allow us to say with certainty that this is over,” he said, adding “We’re taking corrective and mitigating action.”
Diaz de Leon declined to name the banks targeted or specify the amounts stolen. He said the central bank was still probing what had happened.
He later said in a radio interview that all the evidence — so far still partial — pointed to cyberattacks.
The central bank’s head of operations, Lorenza Martinez, said on Friday that five financial institutions were targeted with “unauthorized transfers.”
One source said cyber attackers might have received assistance from inside bank branches, since such big cash withdrawals were uncommon.
“In terms of the security of the bank’s offices, I think that is part of the analysis that each bank is doing,” Martinez said.
He stressed that clients’ accounts had not been affected so far and that only the accounts of financial institutions in the Central Bank had been hit.
Source: Presstv
15, May 2018
UN says 160,000 displaced in crisis-hit Southern Cameroons 0
Around 160,000 people have been displaced in the crisis-hit North-West and South-West Anglophone regions that have been gripped by clashes and insecurity since late 2016. The majority of the displaced have fled into the bush with little to survive on.
Others are hosted by local communities who are also grappling with adverse living conditions. The conflict has also forced around 20,000 civilians to seek refuge across the border in neighbouring Nigeria.
Aid organisations in Cameroon are planning to roll out emergency food, health, protection, shelter and education assistance as well as provide basic household items.
At least 12 attacks targeting Government troops have been reported in the past week, according to the Ministry of Defense.