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Russian security services involved in recent cyberattack, says Ukraine

Ukraine's state security service said on Saturday that the Russian security services were involved in a recent cyberattack that hit Ukraine, saying the aim was to destroy important data and spread panic.

Same hacking groups blamed for cyberattack that crippled Ukrainian power grid last December

An employee sits next to a payment terminal out of order at a branch of Ukraine's state-owned bank Oschadbank after Ukrainian institutions were hit by a wave of cyberattacks in Kyiv on June 27. (Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters)

Ukraine's state security service (SBU) said on Saturday that the Russian security services were involved in a recent cyber attack that hit Ukraine, saying the aim was to destroy important data and spread panic.

The SBU also said the attack, which started in Ukraine and spread around the world on Tuesday, was by the same hackers who attacked the Ukrainian power grid in December 2016. Ukrainian politicians were quick to blame Russia for Tuesday's attack, but a Kremlin spokesman dismissed "unfounded blanket accusations."

"The available data, including those obtained in cooperation with international antivirus companies, give us reason to 
believe that the same hacking groups are involved in the attacks, which in December 2016 attacked the financial system, 
transport and energy facilities of Ukraine using TeleBots and BlackEnergy," the SBU said.

"This testifies to the involvement of the special services of Russian Federation in this attack."

Russia and Ukraine have been at loggerheads since 2014 when Russia annexed Crimea.

The SBU in an earlier statement on Friday said it had seized equipment it said belonged to Russian agents in May and June to launch cyber attacks against Ukraine and other countries.

"The main purpose of the virus was the destruction of important data, disrupting the work of public and private institutions in Ukraine and spreading panic among the people," the SBU said of the recent attack.

A cyber attack in December on a Ukrainian state energy computer caused a power cut in the northern part of the capital Kyiv.

The Russian foreign ministry and Federal Security Service did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the latest allegations.