Anonymous vows revenge
Anonymous Cambodia has pledged to attract more followers and
ramp up attacks on government websites in response to the arrest earlier
this month of two members of the international “hacktivist” group’s
local arm.
“We will start [the attacks] when there are more supporters in order
to help release our two members,” says a post on a Facebook page with
the group’s name, which was launched on Tuesday and already has gained
more than 8,000 “likes”.
“Anonymous around the world will join us in order to topple the
government of Cambodia,” the statement warned. “We will not forget about
[those] who arrested our members. We will not forgive them and we will
continue our work.”
The group lists the National Police website, which announced the previously secret arrests on Tuesday, as a target.
It has also uploaded a video to YouTube purporting to teach new
members how to conduct Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks that
can take websites offline.
Two 21-year-old members of the group were arrested on April 7. Bun
King Mongkolpanha, or “Black Cyber”, and Chu Songheng, or “Zoro”, face
accusations of computer hacking that can carry prison terms of up to two
years.
According to the police statement, Songheng had claimed he had not
participated in any attacks and was merely trying to learn hacking
skills.
Police say they arrested the pair after eight months of investigation with the help of the US Federal Bureauof Investigation.
Dim Chaoseng, the pair’s lawyer, said on Tuesday that a trial date
had yet to be set and that he hoped to a receive the case file next
week.
Chaoseng added that he would seek to convince the judge that his
clients were merely students trying to learn about information
technology through hacking and so should be re-educated rather than
brought to trial.
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