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HOLD MY BEER, America! Australia Does The Job RIGHT, Slapping Sanctions On Kim’s Cybergang

NorthKoreaHOLD MY BEER, America! Australia Does The Job RIGHT, Slapping Sanctions On Kim's Cybergang
 News1
 News1

The Australian government announced on Thursday that it would impose unilateral sanctions against four organizations and one individual involved in funding North Korea’s illicit weapons development program.

The sanctions list targets North Korea’s notorious cyber warfare groups: Lazarus, Kimsuky, and Andariel, along with their front company, Chosun Expo Joint Venture. Park Jin-hyuk, a key operative in these organizations, is also included. These entities and individuals face financial restrictions and travel bans.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong stated that this action, coordinated with the U.S., aims to disrupt North Korea’s illegal revenue streams and address the persistent threats to regional security and stability.

Minister Wong highlighted that North Korean hacker groups are financing their weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programs through global cryptocurrency theft and the deployment of fake information technology (IT) personnel.

She emphasized that it calls on North Korea to fully comply with the United Nations (UN) Security Council resolutions and to abandon its illegal WMD and ballistic missile programs in a complete, verifiable, and irreversible manner.

Australia’s sanctions come on the heels of the U.S. Treasury Department’s recent actions on Tuesday, which targeted eight individuals and two entities linked to North Korean cybercrime operations.

North Korea’s virtual asset theft continues to escalate at an alarming rate. In the past year alone, hackers with ties to North Korea stole approximately 1.7 billion USD in cryptocurrency. This year, that figure is estimated to have already surpassed 2 billion USD.

A single incident, the Bybit exchange hack in February, resulted in a staggering theft of about 1.5 billion USD, underscoring the increasing sophistication and audacity of these cyber operations.

Intelligence reports indicate that North Korea has been funneling these ill-gotten gains into its nuclear and missile programs, using the funds to acquire military equipment and critical raw materials such as copper.

As North Korea’s cyber threats have intensified, the international community has strengthened its collaborative efforts. What was once primarily a U.S.-led sanctions regime against North Korea has evolved into a robust multilateral pressure campaign, with key allies including South Korea, the European Union, Japan, and Australia joining forces to counter the threat.

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