
GCHQ Fears UK Elections Are At Risk From Russian Cyber Attacks

Seminars will be held to educate politicians on the threat from Russia after its spies were accused of carrying out cyber-attacks to tamper with US and German elections.
Ciaran Martin, chief executive of GCHQ's new National Cyber Security Centre have written to leaders of all the main political parties to offer advice on how to withstand attacks, according to The Sunday Times.
In the letter, he said: "You will be aware of the coverage of events in the United States, Germany and elsewhere reminding us of the potential for hostile action against the UK political system.
In February, Mr Martin warned that 188 high-level cyber-attacks, "many of which threatened national security", had struck Britain in the previous three months.
Chancellor Philip Hammond, a former defence and foreign secretary, also said the NCSC had been blocking "potential attacks" on Government departments and the public at a rate of around 200 hacks a day.
US intelligence services have accused the Kremlin of breaching Democratic National Committee computers in an attempt to interfere with the presidential election won by Donald Trump.
Germany's domestic intelligence agency warned in December that Russia was trying to influence the upcoming federal elections with "increasingly aggressive cyber espionage".