2 Nigerians Arrested for Hacking Ghana Army Emails
Afrik Update
New/Africa
GHANA
Two Nigerians have been arrested for allegedly attempting to divert $13,978 belonging to Ghanaian peacekeepers after they had succeeded in hacking into the e-mails of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF).
New/Africa
GHANA
Two Nigerians have been arrested for allegedly attempting to divert $13,978 belonging to Ghanaian peacekeepers after they had succeeded in hacking into the e-mails of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF).
The
suspects, Peter Okechukwu, 32, and Emmanuel Ifedi, 31, were arrested by
officials of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police
Service at a branch of the United Bank of Africa (UBA), in Accra, where they
had gone to cash the money.
According
to the Director General of the CID, Commissioner of Police, Mr Prosper Agblor,
in November, this year, the two suspects managed to enter the e-mails of
Continental African Trading Limited (CATAL) and the United Nations Interim
Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) GHANBATT 76 and intercepted all electronic
communications between the two parties.
CATAL,
an international organisation, had been supplying home appliances to Ghanaian
peacekeeping troops on various missions at different locations in the world.
Recently
CATAL was contacted as usual by the GAF to supply home appliances for UNIFIL
GHANBATT 76 peacekeeping troops
in Lebanon.
Mr
Agblor said there was correspondence between CATAL and the military
through the Internet concerning the supply of the items.
Somewhere
along the line, he said, the e-mails between GAF and CATAL were hacked into by
the two Nigerians who intercepted all mails from both ends and replied them as
if they were coming from the rightful receivers of the email.
Mr
Agblor said the two suspects using the identity of CATAL sent an email to the
military instructing them to pay cash in the sum of $13,978 into a United Bank
for Africa account number 01011651102235 as part payment for the supply of the
goods.
Upon
receipt of the information, the GAF transfered $13,978 into the account
as instructed by the two suspects.
Mr
Agblor said CATAL realised that the military had suddenly stopped communicating
with them on matters relating to the transfer of the money so they followed up
with a phone call and detected that the military had paid an amount of $13,978
into an account number supplied by them.
He
said it was at that stage that they both realised that someone had hacked into
their emails and quickly reported the issue to the Documentation and Visa Fraud
Unit of the CID.
Mr
Agblor said that the Business Development Manager of CATAL reported the case to
the police and checks at the bank revealed that the money had not yet been
cashed by the suspects.
The
police therefore mounted surveillance at the bank awaiting the arrival of the
suspects.
According
to Mr Agblor, on November 11, 2012, Peter Okechukwu who happened to be the
owner of the said account was arrested when he turned up at the bank to cash
the amount.
Upon
interrogation, the police said, Okechukwu admitted to the offence but mentioned
Emmanuel Ifedi as the master brain behind the whole deal and led the police to
his house at Ashaley Botwe, an Accra suburb.
He
said investigations were still on-going after which the two would be put before
court.
Source:Daily Graphic
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