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Isis plotting cyber warfare to kill people in UK, claims George Osborne

Chancellor George Osborne will announce the new National Cyber Centre, which will be based at GCHQ

Oliver Wright
Political Editor
Monday 16 November 2015 20:05 EST
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The new National Cyber Centre will be based at GCHQ
The new National Cyber Centre will be based at GCHQ (Rex)

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The Government is to invest nearly £2bn to create the country’s first “cyber force” to combat online threats from states and terror groups, the Chancellor George Osborne will announce today.

The new National Cyber Centre will be based at GCHQ, and the money – to be spent over next five years – is expected to create hundreds of new jobs dedicated to tackling cyber attacks against the UK. While the majority of the work will be directed at state-sponsored online attacks, Mr Osborne will warn that groups like Isis are also developing increasingly sophisticated cyber capabilities.

He will say that while Isis has not yet been able to use “cyber warfare to kill people by attacking infrastructure, we know they want it [that capability], and are doing their best to build it.

"If our electricity supply, or our air traffic control, or our hospitals were successfully attacked online, the impact could be measured not just in terms of economic damage but of lives lost."

He will say: “When we talk about tackling Isis, that means tackling their cyber threat as well as guns, bombs and knives.”

David Cameron has also announced that an extra £1bn from Britain’s international aid budget will be diverted to helping war-torn countries the Government fears will provide havens for terrorist groups.

Cameron urges Putin to back him over Isis

The amount of aid money spent on supporting broken and fragile states – including Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon and Somalia – is to be boosted from around £4.9bn a year to more than £6bn.

The Prime Minister said the cash would be used to stabilise “broken states” struggling with terrorism or dealing with large numbers of refugees.

“This will make our aid spending an even more fundamental part of our strategy to keep this country safe and it will help to maintain Britain’s position as No 1 in the world for soft power.”

Delivering the Lord Mayor’s Banquet speech in London, he said: “It may be called soft power but whether it’s saving the lives of refugees by stopping them from having to make the perilous journey across the Mediterranean, helping the Lebanese build defences [against Isis], or using our expertise to help countries establish the building blocks of democracy, justice and the rule of law, that soft power packs a real punch.”

In the House of Commons Home Secretary Theresa May called on other European leaders to take stronger action to stamp out the supply of the assault rifles across the continent. Ms May told MPs that British firearms laws were among the toughest in the world and the guns used on Friday night were not easily available in this country.

She said it was crucial to reduce the number of weapons being brought into the EU, and disclosed that she would raise the issue at a meeting of European interior ministers on Friday. “In the UK we have seen tough legislation work, and so we want to see action taken to make a difference to the availability of firearms in Europe, particularly assault rifles,” she told the Commons.

French ambassador to London Sylvie Bermann, left, and Theresa May at the French Embassy in London
French ambassador to London Sylvie Bermann, left, and Theresa May at the French Embassy in London (PA)

Ms May warned that the degree of co-ordination and planning in the Paris attacks left little doubt that the terrorist rate is evolving, and confirmed that the police presence at key locations had been stepped up since Friday and border checks at ports intensified.

The Prime Minister also delivered a bleak warning of the scale of the terrorist threat as he revealed that the security services had prevented seven attacks in the past year. The previous running total was six, indicating one had been foiled in recent weeks. Mr Cameron warned that an atrocity “could happen here” and said the Paris atrocities meant “you have to go right back to the drawing board”. He suggested he was sympathetic to accelerating the introduction of new powers for the security services to monitor emails and website visits. He said that “we should look at the timetable” of the planned Investigatory Powers Bill, which is expected to become law late next year. However, Ms May promised that the new powers would receive “proper scrutiny” in Parliament ahead of their introduction.

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