logo
Russia's Aeroflot cancels dozens of flights after cyber attack causes IT outage

Russia's Aeroflot cancels dozens of flights after cyber attack causes IT outage

Rhyl Journal28-07-2025
Ukrainian hacker group Silent Crow and Belarusian hacker activist group the Belarus Cyber-Partisans, which opposes the rule of Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, claimed responsibility for the cyber attack.
It is one of the most disruptive cyber attacks to hit Russia since the start of the country's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
Previous attacks have targeted Russian government websites and other major Russian companies – notably the state-owned Russian Railways – but normal services have resumed within hours.
Images shared on social media showed hundreds of delayed passengers crowding Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport, where Aeroflot is based.
The outage also disrupted flights operated by Aeroflot's subsidiaries, Rossiya and Pobeda.
While most of the flights affected were domestic, the disruption also led to cancellations for some international flights to Belarus, Armenia and Uzbekistan.
In a statement released early on Monday, Aeroflot warned passengers that the company's IT system was experiencing unspecified difficulties and that disruption could follow.
Russia's prosecutor's office later confirmed that a cyber attack had caused the outage and that it had opened a criminal investigation.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov called reports of the attack 'quite alarming', adding that 'the hacker threat is a threat that remains for all large companies providing services to the general public'.
Silent Crow claimed it had accessed Aeroflot's corporate network for a year, copying customer and internal data, including audio recordings of phone calls, data from the company's own surveillance on employees and other intercepted communications.
'All of these resources are now inaccessible or destroyed and restoring them will possibly require tens of millions of dollars. The damage is strategic,' the channel purporting to be the Silent Crow group wrote on Telegram.
There was no way to independently verify its claims.
The same channel also shared screenshots that appeared to show Aeroflot's internal IT systems and insinuated that Silent Crow could begin sharing the data it had seized in the coming days.
'The personal data of all Russians who have ever flown with Aeroflot have now also gone on a trip – albeit without luggage and to the same destination,' it said.
The Belarus Cyber-Partisans told The Associated Press that it had hoped to 'deliver a crushing blow'.
The group has previously claimed responsibility for a number of cyber attacks, and said in April 2024 that it had been able to infiltrate the network of Belarus's main KGB security agency.
'This is a very large-scale attack and one of the most painful in terms of consequences,' group co-ordinator Yuliana Shametavets said.
She said the group had been preparing the attack for several months, and was able to penetrate the Aeroflot network by exploiting various vulnerabilities.
Belarus is a close ally of Russia.
Mr Lukashenko, who has ruled Belarus with an iron hand for more than 30 years and has relied on Russian subsidies and support, allowed Russia to use his country's territory to launch a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24 2022 and to deploy some of Moscow's tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus.
Russia's airports have repeatedly faced mass delays over the summer as a result of Ukrainian drone attacks, with flights grounded amid safety concerns.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

An emphatic 2026 win for the SNP will mean no excuses for inaction
An emphatic 2026 win for the SNP will mean no excuses for inaction

The National

time40 minutes ago

  • The National

An emphatic 2026 win for the SNP will mean no excuses for inaction

Given that support for independence is around 50% and support for establishing a Scottish parliament was around 75%, it does not take too much imagination to believe that a significant majority can be persuaded (with the help of some serious campaigning) to vote for that parliament to have the legal authority to conduct a referendum enabling the people of Scotland to determine their own future (within or outwith a now dysfunctional Union). READ MORE: Nicola Sturgeon: Alex Salmond 'did not read' 2014 independence paper From Tommy's words, it appears that my personal interpretation of John Swinney's intentions regarding a constitutional convention – as being consistent with the creation of a widely-inclusive citizen's convention – was wrong. However, if we wish to gain broad public support for the next step on our journey to independence then, in addition to progressing an open citizens' convention, independence parties should have the commitment to establishing the legal authority of the Scottish Parliament to conduct a constitutional referendum clearly stated as a primary clause in their manifestos, backed up by stated actions to ensure that authority is granted to Holyrood. Otherwise, unless independence can be achieved in the meantime by alternative actions, the next Westminster General Election must be declared a de facto referendum. Offering another perspective to the dilemmas confronting 'Old John' and Jim Taylor (Letters, Aug 11), and no doubt many others, the more emphatic an SNP victory, the less excuse the SNP hierarchy will have for not taking substantive actions in support of a public mandate. This approach may be considered hypocritical by some if they do not support the route to independence advocated by the current First Minister, but to vote otherwise in the knowledge that it could bring about a Labour government in Holyrood would seem a betrayal to most who are absolutely committed to independence. Better to give neither the First Minister nor the Prime Minister any excuse for not delivering, or for further delaying, the means of exercising the right of Scotland's people to determine their own future. Stan Grodynski Longniddry, East Lothian TRUMP'S views on a deal with Putin over Ukraine seems like a deal between 18th-century aristocrats settling their gambling debts. Trump acts like an18th-century monarch. No consideration is given to the views of residents of the possible transfer areas, who are merely insignificant chequers in a high-stakes gambling deal. It seems reminiscent of the Act of Union, whereby the ruling elite in Scotland agreed to a union with England against the will of the general populace. READ MORE: David Pratt: Are Trump and Putin about to stitch up Ukraine? Trump will no doubt gain whatever happens, and Ukraine will suffer, being back under a modern Russian Czar. President Trump will parade as a peacemaker, and his sycophants (with usual brown envelopes pocketed) will propose him for a Nobel Peace Prize which he desires, hypocrite that he is. What's changed in politics since the 18th century? Modern democracy seems little more than a sham, with elites still in charge. Current political parties seem little more than a means for the current elites to maintain control under a pretext of democracy. Where is real limitation of elector funding? The exist many ways to get round and buy elections. If you're in the know, it seems funding is unrestricted. The current government in the UK, as well as the previous one, seem uninterested in altering the present set-up, as they both benefit from it. Drew Reid Falkirk YOUR article 'PM claims people feeling 'better off'' by Hamish Morrison (Aug 7) presents the reader with the classic case of 'the ventriloquist has died but the dummy keeps talking'! The 'dummy' tells us that his government is 'bearing down' on costs and 'putting more money into people's pockets'. Yes, the pockets of his sponsors, big businesses and fellow Labour parliamentarians, definitely NOT those of the people of the country! Since Labour came to power, the 'dummy' has increased the weekly shopping costs by as much as 40%. The facts reveal 'disposable income' is falling! It's not falling, it's PLUMMETING in an ever-increasing spiral into those same pockets that enabled Starmer to become PM. The answer is to tax the super-rich and get them to pay their fair share. Everyone knows 'Starmer the dummy' will never do that because HE is one of the super rich along with his cronies who sit beside him on the government benches. As for 'the focus will be on living standards', these are also PLUMMETING under his watch. Everybody and anybody in the 'vulnerable' category will be forced to pay more tax but not the wealthy pals, sponsors and big businesses who back this 'dummy'. I don't ever see 'Rachel from Accounts' do anything to help anyone other than herself and the 'dummy'. It's time the dummy was put back in the box and a real person with a spine and a conscience took over – or better still, let Scotland leave this Westminster pantomime. Jim Todd Cumbernauld

Putin's summer offensive is gaining momentum
Putin's summer offensive is gaining momentum

Spectator

timean hour ago

  • Spectator

Putin's summer offensive is gaining momentum

Vladimir Putin is set to arrive at his meeting with Donald Trump in Alaska on Friday with additional leverage: his summer offensive has finally reached momentum. In recent days, Russian forces have breached Ukraine's defensive line near Dobropillia, north of Pokrovsk, pushing up to ten miles deep into the western sector of the Donetsk region still under Ukrainian control. The advance, carried out mainly on foot and motorbikes, has yet to crystallise into a full-scale breakthrough, but it ranks among the fastest Russian gains of the past year – and comes at the worst possible moment for Kyiv. The Ukrainian military command denies the reports that Russian human wave assaults have bypassed the recently built fortifications around the village of Zolotyi Kolodiaz and other small settlements close to Dobropillia. Oleksandr Syrskyi, the army chief, repeated his now-routine reassurance, 'the situation is difficult but under control', considering that Russia had amassed over 100,000 troops to seize Pokrovsk. The Dnipro operational group, responsible for the eastern front, has called the sudden breach a mapping error: We must understand that this is not about them taking control of the territory. It's about a small group of Russians – around 5-10 men – sneaking in. It is absolutely not how it looks on the map. Yet, for some reason, three brigades – the 92nd, Rubizh and Azov – were pulled out from other sectors of the front to counter the supposed sabotage group holed up in the basement. Several soldiers went public to warn about the deteriorating situation in the Pokrovsk direction, given that Putin is throwing everything he has into the offensive ahead of the Alaska summit. Bohdan Krotevych, former chief of staff of Azov, appealed to Volodymyr Zelensky: Mr President, I sincerely don't know what exactly is being reported to you, but I'm informing you: on the Pokrovsk–Kostiantynivka line, without exaggeration, the situation is fucked. And this chaos has been growing for a long time. During my trip to Ukraine in May, I had a short stop in Dobropillia on my way to Pokrovsk, and even then, moving just twelve miles from one frontline city to another was a deadly lottery. Dobropillia, once home to 28,000 people, has become a military hub full of green-painted trucks and stray dogs, much like other remaining strongholds in the Donetsk region. I set off towards Pokrovsk in the dark to avoid drawing the attention of Russian drones, but halfway there, the soldier driving me hit the brakes: Russia had bombed the building directly ahead of us. It was a weapons warehouse. I reached the front line before first light in one piece, but the same can't be said for my driver. On his way back to Dobropillia, a Russian glide bomb struck his vehicle. He was badly injured, but miraculously survived. The warzone looked different from the one I had seen last autumn. Fibre-optic drones, immune to jamming, dominated the skies, and the Russians have used them in overwhelming numbers. When I visited the 25th Sicheslav Brigade stationed near Pokrovsk, their drone unit had just six fibre-optic drones, while the Russians had dozens flying towards us. Yet it was not drones, but endless infantry that allowed Russia to penetrate Ukrainian positions this week. Ukrainian soldiers often joke that their side of the battlefield is being held by 'the grandads' – men in their fifties and sixties getting old in the trenches. Infantry shortages are so severe that a National Guard drone unit I visited was forced to hold empty positions with drones because there were not enough men to fill them. The Russians had more assault troops than Ukraine had drones, allowing them to slip repeatedly behind Ukrainian lines. With all that said, the Russian breach north of Pokrovsk doesn't come unexpectedly. It is the product of months of accumulated issues in Ukraine's armed forces, starting from inefficient mobilisation, chronic weapons shortages, chaos in communication between units, misleading reports from the field to senior command and ill-conceived orders to attack for the sake of attacking rather than stabilising the defence. As many soldiers have pointed out, there is also the deeper problem: the absence of a clear strategic vision from Ukraine's military leadership about what can realistically be achieved on the battlefield. The result is that Russian troops are now tightening the noose around the last fortress cities in the Ukrainian-held quarter of Donbas.

Russian forces break through Ukraine frontline days before Putin-Trump summit
Russian forces break through Ukraine frontline days before Putin-Trump summit

Daily Mirror

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Russian forces break through Ukraine frontline days before Putin-Trump summit

Around 100,000 Russian troops are believed to have travelled at least 10km north of the Ukrainian frontline - days before upcoming peace talks between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin Vladimir Putin's troops have reportedly staged a sudden breakthrough on the Ukrainian frontline - just days before the Russian leader is due to meet the US President for critical peace talks. ‌ The unexpected push took place near the coal-mining town of Dobropillia and marks the most dramatic movement on the front line so far this year, possibly handing Putin a strategic advantage at the negotiating table on Friday. Reports claim around 100,000 Russian troops have moved at least 10km north in two separate thrusts over recent days, part of an ongoing campaign to capture the whole of the Donetsk region. Forces are also said to have pushed towards three villages in a section of the front near Kostyantynivka and Pokrovsk. ‌ Ukraine's DeepState authority warned: "The situation is quite chaotic, as the enemy, having found gaps in the defence, is infiltrating deeper, trying to quickly consolidate and accumulate forces for further advancement." It comes after Putin warned of a nuclear war after unleashing another night of hell on Ukraine. ‌ Military sources say the latest assault relied on small sabotage and infantry groups to break through. Ukrainian officials confirmed that reinforcements had been sent to the area, and reported that some Russian soldiers had been killed or taken prisoner. The escalation comes amid diplomatic tension, with Moscow accusing Britain of attempting to disrupt the forthcoming Trump-Putin meeting. The accusation followed comments from Sir Keir Starmer, who insisted the Russian leader could not be trusted. "Peace must be built with Ukraine, not imposed upon it," Starmer said on Monday, as he expressed concern that Kyiv could be left out of the negotiations. Asked whether he thought Putin could be trusted, the prime minister's official spokesman said the UK supported both Kyiv and the US president's push for peace, but not Moscow. "Never trust President Putin as far as you could throw him, but we obviously will support Ukraine," he said. "We will obviously support President Trump and European nations as we enter these negotiations. But it is exactly why we've been leading this work on the coalition of the willing, because any ceasefire, as I say, cannot just be an opportunity for President Putin to go away, re-arm, restrengthen, and then go again. "So we're not going to leave it to trust. We're going to ensure that we're prepared such that we achieve a ceasefire."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store