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Julian Assange |
Credit: Reuters
Hackers have
targeted British government websites in the last 24 hours, the government said
on Tuesday, after activist hacking group Anonymous said it had launched attacks
to protest against the handling of the case of WikiLeaks' founder Julian
Assange.
Downing
Street, the office of Prime Minister David Cameron, and the Home Office said
attempts to disrupt the work of their sites had failed or caused minor
problems, although the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) said the attack had affected
its website.
The incident
comes as Assange - who is trying to avoid extradition to Sweden where he is
wanted for questioning over rape allegations - remains holed up in the
Ecuadorean Embassy in London. He and Ecuador have criticised the British
government for suggesting it might revoke the embassy's diplomatic status in
order to enter and arrest him.
"This
is a public information website and no sensitive data is held on it. Measures
put in place to keep the website running mean that some visitors may be unable
to access the site intermittently," an MoJ spokeswoman said.
Downing
Street was dismissive of the incident.
"There
may have been an attempt but as far as we are concerned it was
unsuccessful," a spokeswoman said.
All the
websites appeared to be functioning normally on Tuesday. Anonymous, a
loose-knit group of international hackers, suggested it was behind the attacks
which it linked to the Assange case.
"Justice.gov.uk
seems to be offline. Odd. #Anonymous #Assange," said a posting on the
group's Twitter website at the time of the attacks on Monday night.
It later
added: "Sorry for the delay Forgot to say no3 #TangoDown aprox 1 hour ago
;) number10.gov.uk/ #OpFreeAssange."
Britain has
said Assange will be arrested and deported if he emerges from the embassy after
Ecuador granted him political asylum last week. He says he is the victim of a
U.S.-led witch-hunt over his whistle-blowing website.
Anonymous
has carried out a number of attacks on British and international government
departments, usually using a distributed denial of service tactic, where a
website's host computers are bombarded with requests for information, making
them crash. It has also targeted companies it deems have worked against
WikiLeaks' interests including Visa and Mastercard.
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