Italy has extradited an accused Chinese hacker wanted in the United States for allegedly stealing vaccine research at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Italian authorities handed over the “dangerous foreign hacker” to the US following his arrest in Milan last July on suspicion of conducting cyberattacks against universities and other institutions engaged in COVID-related research, the Italian National Police said in a statement on Monday.
- list 1 of 4Survivors of deadly Indonesia train crash pulled from wreckage
- list 2 of 4US Supreme Court reinstates Republican-favoured Texas electoral map
- list 3 of 4Bahrain strips 69 people of citizenship over Iran support
- list 4 of 4Israeli settlers attack Palestinians and set house on fire
end of list
The suspect and his co-conspirators allegedly exploited cybersecurity flaws in email software to target thousands of computers in a Chinese state-sponsored cyber-espionage campaign dubbed “Hafnium”, Italian police said on Monday.
The US Department of Justice said the suspect, 34-year-old Xu Zewei, had targeted universities, immunologists, and virologists under the direction of China’s Ministry of State Security while employed at the “enabling” company, Shanghai Powerock Network.
Prosecutors said the targeted institutions included a university in southern Texas and a law firm with offices in Washington, DC, and worldwide.
Xu appeared in the US District Court in Houston, Texas, on Monday to face nine criminal counts, including wire fraud and conspiracy to obtain information by unauthorised access to protected computers, according to US prosecutors.
“The United States is committed to pursuing hackers who steal information from US businesses and universities and threaten our cybersecurity,” Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A Eisenberg said in a statement.
Advertisement
“I commend the prosecutors and investigators who have worked hard and sought justice for years in this investigation, and we look forward to proving our case in court,” Eisenberg said.
The Chinese Embassy in Washington, DC, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Beijing has previously denied conducting hacking operations in the US and elsewhere around the world, branding such claims as “groundless accusations” and “smears”.
Xu’s lawyers in Italy and the US, Simona Candido and Dan Cogdell, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
If convicted, Xu could face up to 20 years in prison for each count of the most serious charges against him.
Related News
Can Pakistan secure Iran-US nuclear compromise, as Trump says deal ‘close’?
DRC government, M23 rebels commit to protect civilians, aid deliveries
US forces attack and seize Iranian ship Touska near Strait of Hormuz