“They targeted activists, journalists and dissidents among Uighurs and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang, China, who live mainly abroad in Turkey, Kazakhstan, the United States and other countries,” Facebook said in a post on Wednesday. detailed his conclusions about the cyber espionage campaign.
“This group used fake Facebook accounts to create fictitious people posing as journalists, students, human rights lawyers or members of the Uyghur community to build trust with the people they targeted and trick them into clicking malicious links, ”the company said.
The US State Department has previously estimated that up to 2 million Uighurs, as well as members of other Muslim minority groups, have been detained in internment camps in the region.
The hacking groups identified as behind the latest campaign are known in the cybersecurity industry as “Evil Eye” and “Earth Empusa” and have been implicated in previous espionage campaigns, according to Facebook.
Facebook and other social media platforms have been widely criticized for allowing Russian trolls to present themselves as Americans online before the 2016 election. Since then, Facebook has publicly called on some governments and other entities it finds using. and the platform for harmful purposes.