CHINA
SEPTEMBER 22 2007 08:33h
Text
China has been the target of a big increase in cyber-attacks in recent years and faces more of a threat from hackers than any country.
Beijing has hotly denied recent reports in Western media that Chinese hackers penetrated systems in the Pentagon and in the chancellery and key ministries of German leader Angela Merkel.
Computers in Britain's Foreign Office have also been hit, according to the Guardian newspaper.
Countries that are victims of computer hackers should work together instead of arbitrarily blaming China, Wang Xinjun, a researcher at the People's Liberation Army's Academy of Military Sciences, told the official Xinhua news agency.
"In fact, hackers' attacks on China's computer systems have surged in recent years and China is facing a more severe information security situation than any Western country," Xinhua quoted Wang as saying.
"But the Chinese government never blames it on any other country and insists on calling for international cooperation to crack down on Internet-wrecking crime," he added.
He said it was strange that China was singled out for blame when only one or two attacks out of thousands had been traced back to China.
Governments should put aside their prejudices towards China and abandon their "cold war mentality", Wang said, without naming names.
"Countries should strengthen exchanges of information on hackers' attacks and make it easier for other countries to track down the hackers," he told Xinhua.
Comment
Putin urges population growth
Sarkozy's wife too glamorous for statue


Singer Whitney Houston Dead at 48 in Losa Angeles
Diana Ross attends the annual Clive Davis pre-Gram
Jill Stuart Fall 2012 Collections
Syrians Inspect the damage to their homes
33rd anniversary of the Islamic Revolution in Tehr
General strike in Athens, Greece
"HAYABUSA : The long voyage home" openni
Protests continue in Syria
Giffords and Kelly in the Oval Office of the White
will.i.am attends the TRANS4M Boyle Heights benefi



WORLD REPORT
WORLD REPORT
BIZARRE