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Balkan police co-operate to fight cybercrime (SETimes.

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Balkan police co-operate to fight cybercrime


21/09/2012

Officials seek greater collaboration to confront the wide-ranging opportunities computers and the Internet offers criminals.

By Drazen Remikovic for Southeast European Times in Sarajevo -- 21/09/12


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Officials said training of police personnel is perhaps the most important factor in deterring cybercrime. [Reuters]

Police officials agree co-operation, as well as training, is needed to adequately address computerconducted crime, which increasingly affects citizens' property and safety. Cyber criminals are often felony offenders capable of operating locally as well as internationally, said Gojko Vasic, general director of police in Republika Srpska in BiH. Vasic noted a recent internet fraud case that his department participated in included police from more than 100 countries. "Our police now pay full attention to collaboration with colleagues from neighboring countries," Vasic told SETimes. While some co-operation already exists, police officials have repeatedly called for more, given that cyber criminals co-operate regionally and have a growing means to defraud others.

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14.10.2012.

Balkan police co-operate to fight cybercrime (SETimes.com)

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Regional ministers of internal affairs met in Sarajevo last month to discuss new developments, as well as ways to increase collaboration. They concluded that without joining forces, there's no effective way to combat cybercrime. "The current co-operation is reflected in the data and information exchange and joint training. We have collaborated with each law enforcement agency in the region and co-operation is very good," Vladimir Urosevic, the chief of the electronic crime department in the Serbian police, told SETimes. Police officials explained the most common offenses are unauthorised entry in, and damage of, computer systems and networks; theft by using false bank or credit cards and online forgery. Montenegrin police arrested a 10-member group in mid-August for stealing 1 million euros by hacking foreign bank accounts. But computer-conducted crimes are wide-ranging. In some countries, child or minor abuse via the Internet is becoming more common. "Cybercrime is an extremely complex issue. Today, we have kids in their 20s who literally know [and can do] everything on a computer," Vasic said. "Computer crime usually includes employee fraud, minor and child pornography; fraud; using of mobile telephones and smartphones as tools to commit other crime; identity theft and credit card fraud," Sasa Aksentijevic, an IT and telecommunications court expert in Rijeka, Croatia, told SETimes. The growing opportunities have also attracted foreign cyber criminals to the region. Last month, Croatian police arrested Sergey Litvinenko, a well-known cybercriminal who was sought by the US for computer fraud in the amount of $20 million (15.4 million euros). "The Macedonian police arrested several members of international cybercrime groups in the joint actions in the past few years," Dimce Gastarski, spokesperson for the Macedonian police, told SETimes. Serbian authorities uncovered 59 criminal offenses concerning computer data security, while the Macedonian police arrested 50 people in the past year and a half for cybercrime.

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