North Korea denies it amassed $2 billion through cyberattacks on banks
North Korea denied on Sunday allegations that it had
obtained $2 billion through cyberattacks on banks and cryptocurrency exchanges,
and accused the United States for spreading rumors.
A United Nations report seen by Reuters last month said
North Korea had used "widespread and increasingly sophisticated"
cyberattacks to steal from banks and cryptocurrency exchanges, amassing $2
billion which it used to fund weapons of mass destruction programs.
"The United States and other hostile forces are now
spreading ill-hearted rumors," North Korea's state-run KCNA news agency
reported, citing a statement from the spokesperson for the National
Coordination Committee of the DPRK for Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the
Financing of Terrorism.
"Such a fabrication by the hostile forces is nothing
but a sort of a nasty game aimed at tarnishing the image of our Republic and
finding justification for sanctions and pressure campaign against the
DPRK," the statement said.
Washington has made scant progress towards its goal of
getting North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons program, despite three
meetings between U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong
Un.
North Korea's vice foreign minister said on Saturday that
hopes for talks with Washington were fading, and criticized Mike Pompeo's
recent comments about "North Korea's rogue behavior."
Pyongyang has been blamed in recent years for a series of
online attacks, mostly on financial networks, in the United States, South Korea
and over a dozen other countries, as experts say such cyber activities generate
hard currency for the regime.
The crux of the allegations against North Korea is its
connection to a hacking group called Lazarus that is linked to $81 million
cyber heist at the Bangladesh central bank in 2016 and a 2014 attack on Sony's
Hollywood studio.
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