The Business Times

EU leaders to seek cyber sanctions, press Asia for action

Published Wed, Oct 17, 2018 · 01:47 PM
Share this article.

[BRUSSELS] The European Union should agree a sanctions law to target computer hackers by early next year, the bloc's leaders are set to say on Thursday and will also seek a pledge from Russia and China to help stop cyber attacks, internal EU documents show.

Despite some reluctance from Italy's anti-establishment government, EU leaders will make the call for a new regime to impose economic sanctions more quickly on specific hackers anywhere in the world at their summit on Thursday.

"Work on the capacity to respond to and deter cyber attacks through EU restrictive measures should be taken forward," EU leaders will say, according to a draft of their final summit statement, using EU parlance for economic sanctions.

"Negotiations on all cybersecurity proposals should be concluded before the end of the (EU) legislature," the draft statement said, referring to the April 18, 2019, closure of the European Parliament's term.

Addressing the German parliament on Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel spoke of possible manipulation of next May's European Parliament election, in the latest warning by an EU government that Russia may use cyber attacks and disinformation campaigns to undermine the vote.

Russia has made cyber and electronic warfare part of its military operations, Western officials say, and Britain, the Netherlands and the United States have accused Moscow of conducting a global campaign of computer hacks against the West.

Russia denies meddling in elections or hacking institutions. Russian officials portray such allegations as part of a campaign intended to entrench Moscow's reputation as an enemy.

Diplomats at the Western military alliance NATO, which is set to have its own fully operational cyber command in 2023, say criminal groups in China and North Korea, as well as Islamist militants, are also behind attacks on Western computer networks.

The 28 EU leaders will meet Asian leaders and including Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev and China's Premier Li Keqiang for a summit in Brussels from Thursday evening, where cyber security is expected to be discussed, with a focus on combating hackers in the final statement.

REUTERS

BT is now on Telegram!

For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to  t.me/BizTimes

Technology

SUPPORT SOUTH-EAST ASIA'S LEADING FINANCIAL DAILY

Get the latest coverage and full access to all BT premium content.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Browse corporate subscription here