United States/Egypt - A U.S. security company whose tear gas has been used against
Egyptian demonstrators has become the latest victim of the Anonymous
movement, hackers claimed Tuesday.
In
a statement posted to the Internet, hackers claimed to have broken into
Combined Systems Inc.'s website and stolen personal information
belonging to clients and employees of the Jamestown, Pennsylvania-based
firm. They accused the company of being run by war profiteers who sell
"mad chemical weapons to militaries and cop shops around the world."
The hackers' claims could not immediately be verified, although the company's website was down Tuesday.
Messages
left for Combined Systems executives Donald Smith and Jacob Kravel went
unreturned. A customer service representative said senior employees
were unavailable for comment because they were in a meeting.
Anonymous
has claimed a series of Web attacks worldwide and has increasingly
focused on security companies, law enforcement and governmental
organizations. The group has often worked in tandem with the Occupy
protest movement in the U.S. and has expressed solidarity with the
pro-democracy activists across the Arab world.
Anonymous said it had targeted Combined Systems because it was supplying weaponry used "to repress our revolutionary movements."
It
published a series of what it claimed were intercepted emails, one of
which appeared to be a warning that Combined Systems' site had been
sabotaged, but the messages' authenticity could also not be confirmed.
Combined
Systems says it sells a variety of crowd control devices — including
aerosol grenades, sprays and handcuffs — to law enforcement and military
organizations across the world. Journalists and activists have reported
finding the company's tear gas canisters at Egypt's Tahrir Square,
where authorities have repeatedly cracked down on demonstrators with
deadly force.
Last
year human rights group Amnesty International said that Combined
Systems had delivered some 46 tons of ammunition — including chemical
irritants and tear gas — to the Egyptian government in three separate
shipments.
Amnesty
has asked the U.S. government to stop the shipments, which it said
should be suspended "until there is certainty that tear gas and other
munitions, weaponry or other equipment aren't linked to bloodshed on
Egyptian streets."
Anonymous
indicated that its attack had been timed to coincide the one-year
anniversary of the uprising in Bahrain, the Gulf country hardest hit by
upheaval during the so-called "Arab Spring" protests that began last
year.
The
main Bahrain government website was down for about an hour early
Tuesday, but later appeared to be functioning normally. It wasn't clear
whether the problem stemmed from any kind of cyberattack.
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