Taiwan is to help Guatemala bolster its cybersecurity by establishing operations centers in the Central American nation and providing information security training, sources said on Sunday.
Guatemala, a diplomatic ally of Taiwan, is facing potential cybersecurity risks, after some major local banks commissioned the construction of their computer systems to China’s Huawei Technologies Co, which has been accused of providing backdoors for Chinese state-sponsored hackers to penetrate systems it has built, experts said.
US Army War College’s Strategic Studies Institute professor Robert Evan Ellis, who specializes in Latin American studies, said in a recent interview with the Spanish-language news site Republica that Huawei is active in Guatemala, especially in telecom services and information technology.
Photo: Reuters
He said he was worried about a computer system Huawei installed for Banrural, one of Guatemala’s major banks.
The Guatemalan government might not be able to effectively safeguard the cybersecurity of government agencies and private companies, as it has neither the regulations nor the capabilities to defend against cyberattacks, making its communications infrastructure an easy target for hackers, Ellis said.
In Taipei, an official familiar with foreign affairs said that Huawei’s Central American headquarters is in Guatemala.
Given that Huawei’s 5G networks have been installed throughout Guatemala, as well as the company’s other communications infrastructure, Taiwan would help its ally strengthen its self-defense by establishing cybersecurity operations centers in the country and training cybersecurity talent, they said.
“Clean, reliable networks are the foundation for digital governance, and cybersecurity talent and capabilities are indispensable,” the official said.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has been preparing a group of officials, technical personnel and cybersecurity experts to visit Taiwan’s South and Central American allies to examine their information systems, they said.
Guatemala would be one of the delegation’s destinations, the official said, adding that Taiwan expects to build reliable networks jointly with its allies to defend against cybersecurity risks posed by Huawei’s systems.
The Republic of China (ROC) established diplomatic relations with the Republic of Guatemala in 1934. The country is one of Taiwan’s two diplomatic allies in Central America, along with Belize. They are among the 12 countries that have official diplomatic relations with the ROC.
Additional reporting by CNA
A woman who allegedly spiked the food and drinks of an Australian man with rat poison, leaving him in intensive care, has been charged with attempted murder, the Taipei District Prosecutors’ Office said yesterday. The woman, identified by her surname Yang (楊), is accused of repeatedly poisoning Alex Shorey over the course of several months last year to prevent the Australian man from leaving Taiwan, prosecutors said in a statement. Shorey was evacuated back to Australia on May 3 last year after being admitted to intensive care in Taiwan. According to prosecutors, Yang put bromadiolone, a rodenticide that prevents blood from
China is likely to focus on its economy over the next four years and not set a timetable for attempting to annex Taiwan, a researcher at Beijing’s Tsinghua University wrote in an article published in Foreign Affairs magazine on Friday. In the article titled “Why China isn’t scared of Trump: US-Chinese tensions may rise, but his isolationism will help Beijing,” Chinese international studies researcher Yan Xuetong (閻學通) wrote that the US and China are unlikely to go to war over Taiwan in the next four years under US president-elect Donald Trump. While economic and military tensions between the US and China would
The unification of China and Taiwan is “non-negotiable,” China’s Taiwan Affairs Office (TAO) said yesterday in response to an article by a Chinese academic suggesting that Beijing would not set a timetable for the annexation of Taiwan in the next four years. Chinese international studies researcher Yan Xuetong (閻學通) at Beijing’s Tsinghua University wrote in an article published last week in Foreign Affairs that China’s focus for the next four years would be revitalizing the economy, not preparing a timetable to invade Taiwan. The TAO said that was only the personal opinion of an academic. The Chinese Communist Party has since 1949 committed
US nuclear buildup would not help deter China from using atomic weapons in Taiwan, an unclassified war game by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) showed. The simulation was conducted in response to increasing talk among policy experts that the US should modernize its nuclear weapons to counter increasing Chinese capabilities, the CSIS said in a report on Friday last week. The tabletop exercise — the first large-scale unclassified simulation of a potential nuclear war over Taiwan — found that US nuclear capabilities beyond current modernization plans would have little effect on Beijing’s willingness