Latest Cyber-Attack Disrupts Iran's Internet Access
Iran
has been the target of a number of cyber-attacks this year, and even
though it increased the level of its cyber security following the
Stuxnet virus in 2010, which successfully attacked and disrupted the
centrifuges at a uranium enrichment facility, the occasional worm
does get through and cause havoc.
3
October, 2012
On
Wednesday Mehdi Akhavan Behabadi, secretary of the High Council of
Cyberspace, told the Iranian Labour News Agency that a new
cyber-attack had effectively targeted Iran’s infrastructure and
communications companies, severely disrupting the internet across the
whole country.
“Yesterday we had a heavy attack against the country's infrastructure and communications companies which has forced us to limit the Internet.”
“Presently we have constant cyber-attacks in the country. Yesterday an attack with a traffic of several gigabytes hit the Internet infrastructure, which caused an unwanted slowness in the country's Internet.”
“All of these attacks have been organised. And they have in mind the country's nuclear, oil, and information networks.”
Since sites such as Youtube and Facebook were used to organise mass anti-government protests against the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad back in 2009, the Iranian government has maintained one of the world’s largest internet filters, blocking access to thousands of sites and IP addresses. Yet still the hackers find a way in.
Last month a commander in the elite Revolutionary Guard announced that Iran is ready to defend itself against any form of cyber war, as the country deems it more of a threat than a physical attack. Clearly they were not as ready as they thought.
“Yesterday we had a heavy attack against the country's infrastructure and communications companies which has forced us to limit the Internet.”
“Presently we have constant cyber-attacks in the country. Yesterday an attack with a traffic of several gigabytes hit the Internet infrastructure, which caused an unwanted slowness in the country's Internet.”
“All of these attacks have been organised. And they have in mind the country's nuclear, oil, and information networks.”
Since sites such as Youtube and Facebook were used to organise mass anti-government protests against the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad back in 2009, the Iranian government has maintained one of the world’s largest internet filters, blocking access to thousands of sites and IP addresses. Yet still the hackers find a way in.
Last month a commander in the elite Revolutionary Guard announced that Iran is ready to defend itself against any form of cyber war, as the country deems it more of a threat than a physical attack. Clearly they were not as ready as they thought.
Police
in Iran clash with currency protesters
Police
have reportedly fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators as they
protested against the collapse of rial.
3
October, 2012
Iranian
riot police have clashed with protesters in the capital Tehran over
the collapse of the rial, the country's currency, which has lost a
third of its value against the dollar in a week.
Police
on Wednesday reportedly fired tear gas to disperse demonstrators,
including currency exchange dealers.
It
was the first sign of public unrest over the plunging currency.
The
fall of the rial, which has now lost more than 80 per cent of its
value compared with a year ago, with 17 per cent of its value shed on
Monday alone, has been largely blamed on Western sanctions imposed
over the country's nuclear programme.
The
rial slipped another four per cent on Tuesday to close at 36,100 to
the dollar, according to exchange tracking websites.
Hundreds
of police in anti-riot gear stormed the capital's currency exchange
district of Ferdowsi, arresting illegal money changers and ordering
licenced bureaus and other shops closed, witnesses said.
Several
arrests were seen, carried out by uniformed police or plain-clothes
security officers.
A
protest in Tehran's historic Grand Bazaar - a complex of shops vital
to the city - also took place but was quickly put down by police.
"We
closed because we don't know what is going to happen" in terms
of the currency market, one shopkeeper said.
Economic
'war'
Khalil
Helal, a police commander, was quoted by the Mehr news agency as
saying that police were going to take action against shopkeepers who
closed their businesses, for "disturbing" the situation.
The
head of the national police, Esmail Ahmadi Moghadam, was quoted by
the Fars news agency as saying a special unit comprised of police
chiefs and government economic officials had been created "to
combat those perturbing the
currency
market."
He
added that many people were keeping stashes of foreign currency and
gold at home, "which is having a negative effect on the
economy".
The
protests came after Mahmoud Ahemedinjad, Iran's president, said that
his country will press on with its nuclear programme despite the
problems caused by Western sanctions, including a dramatic slide in
its currency's value.
"We
are not a people to retreat on the nuclear issue," he told a
news conference in Tehran on Tuesday.
"If
somebody thinks they can pressure Iran, they are certainly wrong and
they must correct their behaviour," he said.
Ahmadinejad
said the currency plunge was part of an economic "war"
waged by the West on the Islamic republic and "a psychological
war on the exchange market."
Iran,
he said, had sufficient foreign currency reserves.
Those
reserves were estimated at around $100bn at the end of last year,
thanks to surging oil exports.
'Enormous
pressure'
The
White House said Tuesday that Iranians blamed their leaders for the
rising deprivation caused by US and international sanctions over
Tehran's nuclear program.
White
House spokesman Jay Carney said the fast-deteriorating economic
situation in Iran, which has also sparked price hikes in basic foods,
was a sign the government in Tehran was under "enormous
pressure".
"The
Iranian people are aware of who is responsible for the circumstances
that have befallen the Iranian economy as a result of the regime's
intransigence in its refusal to abide by its obligations."
The
US Treasury estimates Iran's foreign earnings have been cut by $5bn a
month under the Western economic measures.
In
his media conference, Ahmadinejad backtracked on hints he had made
during a visit to New York at the UN General Assembly that Iran could
consider direct negotiations with the United States on the nuclear
issue.
"Direct
negotiation is possible, but needs conditions, and I do not think the
conditions are there for talks. Dialogue should be based on fairness
and mutual respect," he said.
"I
think that this situation cannot last in the relations between Iran
and the United States."
Government
critics
Hardliners
in Iran criticised Ahmadinejad on his return for opening the door to
the possibility of talks with the US. That also fuelled criticism
that his government has mismanaged the economy.
The
chairman of Tehran's chamber of commerce, Yahya Ale-Eshagh, was
quoted as saying by the Mehr news agency that "part of this
(currency) tumult is due to sanctions."
But
he also said "the person who is not able to manage in a time of
crisis should not continue working in his post."
Mohammad
Bayatian, a member of parliament on an industry and mines commission,
said, according to the parliamentary website icana.ir, that "a
petition has been prepared to question the president."
He
said the petition was "due to the government not paying
attention to the parliament's remarks over its management of the
forex market."
The
parliament's presiding board was to decide whether to admit the
petition. If it goes ahead, it would only be to hear Ahmadinejad
speak on the issue, and it would not involve a confidence vote or
other serious procedure.
Mehdi
Mohammadi, a figure close to Iran's Supreme National Security
Council, wrote in a piece for the Vatan Emrouz newspaper on Tuesday:
"Is the currency situation in the market due to sanctions? No
... The problem is not a lack of (foreign) currency."
He
blamed the government, and unidentified "mafias" he said
were profiting from the currency volatility.
Mohammadi
also said holding talks with the US was not an option.
"Past
experience shows that speaking of negotiations in these conditions
only sends a signal of weakness. The enemy only makes concessions and
takes you seriously when you're strong," he wrote.
On
the prospect of a military conflict breaking out over the nuclear
issue, Ahmadinejad reaffirmed that he was "not very concerned"
about persistent threats from Israel
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