Anonymous hacks Chinese government websites

“Dear Chinese government, you are not infallible, today websites are hacked, tomorrow it will be your vile regime that will fall,” the message read. “So expect us because we do not forgive, never. What you are doing today to your Great People, tomorrow will be inflicted to you,” one of the messages read.

Al Jazeera’s Melissa Chan, reporting from Hong Kong, said that the attack was interesting because Anonymous had mostly previously stayed away from attacking Chinese websites.

“This is just (Anonymous’) second attack (on Chinese websites),” Chan said. “The first one a few months ago had been a corporate attack against a Chinese company and it had exposed corporate fraud. This time, of course, the message was more general about online censorship in China.”

Chan also pointed out the attacks did not target national websites, but smaller sites for government bureaus and minor cities.

“The other interesting thing is that the messages they left were left in English, so then that begs the question of whether they wanted to try to reach out to the Chinese public or not,” Chan said.

via Anonymous hacks Chinese websites – Asia-Pacific – Al Jazeera English.

greeks find ways to help one another through their government’s manufactured “crisis”

As Greece’s crisis deepens, more and more people find themselves unable to keep up their social insurance contributions and are disqualified from free medical treatment. A new €5 hospital fee introduced as part of radical austerity measures has made matters worse.

The doctors wanted some kind of permanent facility to meet the needs of people without healthcare cover. They found one in this building, a former training centre owned by a Greek trade union association. The doctors adapted the premises, erected partitions, painted. The centre opened in November last year, since when it has treated about 200 people a week.

A proportion are immigrants, legal or otherwise. Many speak neither Greek nor English; five minutes after I arrived, I was enlisted to help explain to a Congolese youth in French that his temporary residence permit entitled him to free treatment and medicine at a hospital.

But to the medics’ surprise, about 70% of the people they treat each week are Greek citizens. “Essentially, if you’re not earning, if you don’t have money, you no longer have easy access to healthcare,” said Sofie Georgiadou, a dentist who spent several years practising in Bishop’s Stortford, Hertfordshire, before returning to Greece in 2006. She now has a private dental practice in Thessaloniki and comes to the centre two evenings a month.

Georgiadou is one of about 30 dentists who volunteer regularly here, alongside a pool of 40-50 doctors. Several other doctors are on a list of specialists who have volunteered to receive a certain number of patients each week for free at their own surgeries.

“To be perfectly honest,” she said, “I did not expect to be treating Greeks when I started volunteering here last year. I never imagined I would one day find myself working somewhere like this, in Greece. But with the crisis … So many people’s lives have been changed, though no fault of their own. We’re just helping out; it’s the least we can do.”

Fani Demeridou, another volunteer dentist at the centre, said volunteering here “means you can look people in the eyes in the street. You can feel you are doing something to help, and it’s not a lot of times when you can have that. You can look at yourself in the mirror in the morning and feel proud. In this crisis we’re finding ourselves again, you know? For a while there, we had lost ourselves.”

via Greece on the breadline: volunteer GPs help those with nowhere else to go | World news | The Guardian.

u.s.-trained terrorists assassinate iranian scientists

original article from the new yorker, by seymor hirsch:

The Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) conducted training, beginning in 2005, for members of the Mujahideen-e-Khalq, a dissident Iranian opposition group known in the West as the M.E.K. The M.E.K. had its beginnings as a Marxist-Islamist student-led group and, in the nineteen-seventies, it was linked to the assassination of six American citizens. It was initially part of the broad-based revolution that led to the 1979 overthrow of the Shah of Iran. But, within a few years, the group was waging a bloody internal war with the ruling clerics, and, in 1997, it was listed as a foreign terrorist organization by the State Department. In 2002, the M.E.K. earned some international credibility by publicly revealing—accurately—that Iran had begun enriching uranium at a secret underground location. Mohamed ElBaradei, who at the time was the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations’ nuclear monitoring agency, told me later that he had been informed that the information was supplied by the Mossad.

Five Iranian nuclear scientists have been assassinated since 2007. M.E.K. spokesmen have denied any involvement in the killings, but early last month NBC News quoted two senior Obama Administration officials as confirming that the attacks were carried out by M.E.K. units that were financed and trained by Mossad, the Israeli secret service. NBC further quoted the Administration officials as denying any American involvement in the M.E.K. activities. The former senior intelligence official I spoke with seconded the NBC report that the Israelis were working with the M.E.K., adding that the operations benefitted from American intelligence. He said that the targets were not “Einsteins”; “The goal is to affect Iranian psychology and morale,” he said, and to “demoralize the whole system—nuclear delivery vehicles, nuclear enrichment facilities, power plants.” Attacks have also been carried out on pipelines. He added that the operations are “primarily being done by M.E.K. through liaison with the Israelis, but the United States is now providing the intelligence.” An adviser to the special-operations community told me that the links between the United States and M.E.K. activities inside Iran had been long-standing. “Everything being done inside Iran now is being done with surrogates,” he said.

The sources I spoke to were unable to say whether the people trained in Nevada were now involved in operations in Iran or elsewhere. But they pointed to the general benefit of American support. “The M.E.K. was a total joke,” the senior Pentagon consultant said, “and now it’s a real network inside Iran. How did the M.E.K. get so much more efficient?” he asked rhetorically. “Part of it is the training in Nevada. Part of it is logistical support in Kurdistan, and part of it is inside Iran. M.E.K. now has a capacity for efficient operations that it never had before.”

In mid-January, a few days after an assassination by car bomb of an Iranian nuclear scientist in Tehran, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, at a town-hall meeting of soldiers at Fort Bliss, Texas, acknowledged that the U.S. government has “some ideas as to who might be involved, but we don’t know exactly who was involved.” He added, “But I can tell you one thing: the United States was not involved in that kind of effort. That’s not what the United States does.”

Massoud Khodabandeh, an I.T. expert now living in England who consults for the Iraqi government, was an official with the M.E.K. before defecting in 1996. In a telephone interview, he acknowledged that he is an avowed enemy of the M.E.K., and has advocated against the group. Khodabandeh said that he had been with the group since before the fall of the Shah and, as a computer expert, was deeply involved in intelligence activities as well as providing security for the M.E.K. leadership. For the past decade, he and his English wife have run a support program for other defectors. Khodabandeh told me that he had heard from more recent defectors about the training in Nevada. He was told that the communications training in Nevada involved more than teaching how to keep in contact during attacks—it also involved communication intercepts. The United States, he said, at one point found a way to penetrate some major Iranian communications systems. At the time, he said, the U.S. provided M.E.K. operatives with the ability to intercept telephone calls and text messages inside Iran—which M.E.K. operatives translated and shared with American signals intelligence experts. He does not know whether this activity is ongoing.


via News Desk: Our Men in Iran? : The New Yorker.