Hackers have posted a message on several Philippine government Web sites urging the public to join a mass protest against corruption, an official said yesterday.
The Web sites of at least five government agencies, including the anti-graft office of the government ombudsman, have been hacked by a group calling itself “Anonymous Philippines,” Roy Espiritu of the science department’s IT section said.
The message called on the public to join a protest at the gates of the Philippine legislature on Tuesday — the latest Internet appeal for such demonstrations as anger grows over official corruption.
The hackers condemned “this false democracy [and this government and the politicians who only think about themselves.”
The message did not name any politician, but it warned: “To the corrupt — fear us.”
In August an appeal for an anti-graft street protest, aired on social media like Twitter and Facebook, drew tens of thousands of protesters to a central park in Manila. Several smaller protests, also publicized via Internet, have since been held.
Anger has grown since a newspaper in August reported that a businesswoman connived with opposition legislators to syphon off about 10 billion pesos (US$230 million) from a special fund allocated to the pet projects of lawmakers.
The businesswoman has been jailed as graft charges are readied against her while the Justice Department has asked for the cancellation of the passports of three opposition senators and their alleged conspirators.
Filippino President Benigno Aquino III, elected in 2010 on an anti-corruption platform, has also become ensnared in the controversy as opposition and government critics have charged that he was also misusing special funds.
In response, Aquino appeared on national television on Wednesday last week and said: “I am not a thief.”
He accused the opposition of trying to divert public attention from their own alleged corruption.
Previous hacking attacks on Philippine government Web sites have been the work of foreign groups who were angry over diplomatic disputes or by those angry at restrictive cybercrime regulations.
“There is forensic work being done on our end to find out who did this because it is still a crime,” Espiritu said.
Those who deface government Web sites could face up to six months in prison, he added.
However, since government agencies maintain individual Web sites with no uniform standards, it is difficult to secure them from hacking, Espiritu said.
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