Travel News

Major Russian airliner cancels flights following cyberattack

Simon Calder’s Travel

Russia’s Aeroflot was forced to cancel dozens of flights on Monday after a crippling cyberattack claimed by a shadowy pro-Ukrainian hacking group.

The incident, which one lawmaker called a “wake-up call” for Moscow, prompted the Kremlin to express concern and prosecutors to launch a criminal investigation.

Senior lawmaker Anton Gorelkin said Russia was under “digital attack”, adding: “We must not forget that the war against our country is being waged on all fronts, including the digital one.

“And I do not rule out that the ‘hacktivists’ who claimed responsibility for the incident are in the service of unfriendly states.”

Departure boards at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport turned red as flights were cancelled during a peak holiday period.

A statement from a hacking group called Silent Crow, purporting to have acted with the Belarusian group Cyber Partisans, linked the operation to the war in Ukraine.

Aeroflot has not indicated how long the problems will take to resolve.

Aeroflot, the transport ministry and the aviation regulator did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the hack

Aeroflot, the transport ministry and the aviation regulator did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the hack (Reuters)

“Glory to Ukraine! Long live Belarus!” said the statement, whose authenticity Reuters could not immediately verify.

There was no immediate comment from Ukraine.

Silent Crow has previously claimed responsibility for attacks this year on a Russian real estate database, a state telecoms company, a large insurance firm, the Moscow government’s IT department and the Russian office of South Korean carmaker Kia. Some of those resulted in big data leaks.

“The information that we are reading in the public domain is quite alarming. The hacker threat is a threat that remains for all large companies providing services to the population,” said Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov.

Aeroflot, the transport ministry and the aviation regulator did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the hack.

The airline said it had cancelled more than 40 flights – mostly within Russia but also including routes to the Belarusian capital Minsk and the Armenian capital Yerevan – after reporting a failure in its information systems. At least 10 other flights were delayed.

“Specialists are currently working to minimise the impact on the flight schedule and to restore normal service…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at The Independent Travel…