TERRORISTS are plotting to kill Britons in a deadly cyberattack – targeted at the country's infrastructure, finance minister George Osborne will today announce.
Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne has warned ISIS are plotting against UK infrastructure |
The Chancellor of the Exchequer is set to announce a Government plans to double the budget for cyber-security.
Mr Osborne – a close ally to Prime Minister David Cameron – said the terror attacks in Paris underscored the need to improve Britain's protections against electronic attack.
Gunmen – each fitted with a suicide vest – targeted six different locations in central Paris, including the Stade de France where president Francois Hollande was watching the national team play a friendly match against Germany.
Gunmen – each fitted with a suicide vest – targeted six different locations in central Paris |
Terrorists also attacked restaurants, cafes and the Bataclan theatre where rock band Eagles of Death Metal were perfuming to a sell-out crowd.
Terrorists attacked restaurants, cafes and a theatre where Eagles of Death Metal was playing |
"They have not been able to use it to kill people yet by attacking our infrastructure through cyber attack," he said. "But we know they want it and are doing their best to build it."
The Chancellor said public spending on cyber-security would be almost doubled to a total of £1.9 billion over the period to 2020.
At the same time, Mr Osborne prepares to announce fresh overall spending cuts next week in a bid to return Britain to a budget surplus by the end of the decade.
"It is right that we choose to invest in our cyber defences even at a time when we must cut other budgets," he said. "The Internet represents a critical axis of potential vulnerability."
Prime Minister David Cameron said on Monday that the size of Britain's intelligence agency staff would be increased by 15 per cent.
Mr Osborne said the decision to ramp up cyber defence funding had been taken before Friday's bloodshed in Paris.
"The stakes could hardly be higher - if our electricity supply, or our air traffic control, or our hospitals were successfully attacked online, the impact could be measured not just in terms of economic damage but of lives lost."
The force would be based at GCHQ in Cheltenham, southwest England.
Other elements of the plan included possible cooperation between Internet service providers, with help from the government, to fend off malware attacks and block bad addresses used against British Internet users, as well as a new institute to train coders, Osborne said.
The terror attacks in Paris over the weekend left 129 people dead and over 300 injured |
British broadband provider TalkTalk suffered a cyber attack in October which affected 157,000 customers.
Countries around the world fell silent on Monday night and mourned the dead |
This month, Britain and US authorities carried out a drill with leading banks to test their response to a cyber incident in the financial sector.
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