3 Haziran 2015 Çarşamba

Hackers Break Into Saudi Foreign Ministry

A group called the “Yemen Cyber Army” says it was behind the hack. The breach includes the passport information of U.S. nationals who visited Saudi Arabia, as well as internal government communications.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

SAN FRANCISCO — A group calling itself the Yemen Cyber Army has released a cache of documents from Saudi Arabia's foreign ministry, including visa applications that include the passport details of American and other foreign nationals who have applied for visas to visit the Saudi Kingdom.

The group said the documents, which were released over the weekend, were "only the beginning," according to a statement posted on Pastebin. The group has said that they have "sensitive information" obtained from the foreign ministry, and that they will continue releasing the information over the coming weeks.

The Saudi foreign ministry confirmed to BuzzFeed News by phone that they had been hacked, but said the scope of the attack was "limited" and that no sensitive documents were accessed. In a statement made to the Saudi Press Agency, the ministry said it was investigating the breach.

The Yemen Cyber Army only recently emerged with a series of hacking campaigns, including #OpSaudi and #OpKSA targeting Saudi Arabia. In mid-April, the group claimed responsibility for hacking the website of the Saudi-owned al-Hayat daily newspaper. The first cache of documents, which the group claims were stolen off computers in Saudi's foreign ministry, were released nine days ago on Pastebin. Those appeared to include internal government communications as well as passwords and usernames to official Saudi government email accounts. On Friday, a new set of Pastebin links appeared which released passport information for what the Yemen Cyber Army claimed were over one million individuals who applied for visas to the kingdom.

BuzzFeed reached out to several of the U.S. nationals whose details were named. All appeared to be academics who had visited Saudi Arabia in the last five years and who had applied for visas through the foreign ministry.

Cybersecurity experts said that little was known about the group, which has claimed allegiance to the hacktivist collective Anonymous. In a statement posted alongside the data cache, the group wrote, "Your Network Hacked by Yemen Cyber Army. We Are Anonymous. We Are Everywhere. We Are Legion. We do Not Forgive. We do Not Forget. Stop Attacking Our Country."

Reports about the Yemen Cyber Army first appeared on the site of Iran's state-sponsored Press TV.

Saudi Arabia has led a campaign against the Iranian-backed Huthi rebels in Yemen, conducting air strikes since March 25.

Tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia have increased in recent years, as both vie for more control in the region. Iran was thought to be behind a 2012 hack of the Saudi Arabian oil firm Aramco.



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