"The cyber attack in March compromised the
e-mail systems of our most important democratic institution. We
will always react to these types of intrusions," Foreign
Minister Ine Eriksen Soereide said in a statement emailed to
Reuters.
An investigation by the country’s intelligence services had
revealed the attack came from "actors operating out of China",
the ministry said. "Several of our allies, the EU, and Microsoft
have also confirmed this."
"We have conveyed to China in a meeting with the Chinese Embassy
today that this is unacceptable," Soereide told Reuters.
Norway's statement was part of a coordinated international
response, with the United States and a coalition of allies on
Monday accusing China's Ministry of State Security of a global
cyber hacking campaign, specifically attributing it to a wider
Microsoft attack disclosed earlier this year.
The attack had utilised a security hole in Microsoft Corp's
Exchange software.
"Today, alongside NATO, the EU, and several allies individually,
Norway has sent a clear message to China that we assess that the
cyber attack against the Storting (Norwegian parliament) came
from within China, and that we expect Chinese authorities to do
more to prevent malicious cyber activity emanating from Chinese
territory," Soereide said.
The Chinese Embassy in Norway told Reuters that it has requested
evidence for the claims from the Norwegian government.
"We are willing to cooperate with all relevant parties, based on
facts and evidence, to jointly combat illegal activities in
cyber space. At the same time, we strongly oppose baseless
accusations and smears towards China and politicizing relevant
issues," it said in an emailed statement.
The embassy also questioned whether the coordinated actions with
other Western countries was a "collusively political
manipulation".
(Reporting by Nora Buli; editing by Niklas Pollard, Nick Macfie
and Jonathan Oatis)
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