When
I spoke about the need to have cyber laws in place, I clearly mentioned that Africa is the next target –
meaning either it can be used as back door for the cybercriminals to attack
other developed nations or to make use of the growing technology in the
continent for them to obtain easy money.
Shortly after my report, "BBC REPORTED" an
incident happened in Kenya where by Kenyan police say they have cracked a cybercrime
Centre run by 77 Chinese nationals from upmarket homes in the capital, Nairobi.
Police believe they were involved in hacking and money laundering.
China
has promised to fully cooperate with Kenya after police arrested 77 Chinese
nationals thought to be running a cybercrime center in the country’s capital,
Nairobi.
The
arrests, 37 of which occurred last Sunday and a further 40 on Wednesday were
sparked by a fire on Sunday at a home in in Nairobi in which one person died.
Police
investigating the cause of the fire attributed it to a faulty server and a
number of raids then took place on upmarket houses rented by the Chinese
nationals. During these raids they found vast amounts of high-tech equipment
including telephone headsets, computers linked to high-speed internet and
monitors.
According
to local police, it is thought that the gangs were “preparing to raid the
country’s communication systems”.
Speaking
to Kenya’s privately owned Standard newspaper, director of Kenya's Criminal
Investigations Department, Ndegwa Muhoro said: “Preliminary findings show the
fire was caused by one of the servers they were illegally operating”.
Whilst
they have allegedly been charged for being in the country illegally and
operating radio equipment without the necessary permits, local police have said
that the group also appeared to be manufacturing ATM cards, and may have been
involved in money laundering and Internet fraud.
There
are also fears that the group was engaged in espionage. "We have roped in
experts to tell us if they were committing crimes of espionage," Ndegwa
Muhoro told AFP. "These people seem to have been brought here specifically
for a mission which we are investigating."
China
is a major investor in Kenya’s infrastructure and communications networks and
according to the Standard newspaper, China's ambassador to Kenya was summoned
to "explain if his government was aware of the group's activities”.
Following
calls from Kenya's foreign minister Amina Mohamed for China to cooperate on the
matter, the Chinese embassy in Nairobi today released a statement saying
initial investigations suggest that the Chinese nationals were engaged in a “telecommunication fraud case“.
“China
and Kenya enjoy long-standing friendship, and the Chinese side resolutely
supports the Kenyan side in combating all forms of illegal and criminal
activities,” a spokeswoman for the Chinese foreign ministry named Hua Chunying
said in the statement.
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