News / National
Baba Jukwa camp in a state of panic
19 May 2014 at 06:23hrs | Views
The Baba Jukwa camp is reportedly in a state of panic
following the sustained publication of information seized by hackers
from an email account that had been used to solicit for online donations
and indications the authorities may have more information than they
initially let on, the Herald reported.
The authorities have remained curiously tight lipped over the issue with none of the security services coming forward to confirm or deny allegations the intelligence services were involved in the hacking of private emails.
A source with ties to Ncube last night claimed that there were plans to try and discredit the increasingly damaging publication of emails that were authored by the pair and their collaborators.
One of the plans, the source said, was to try and discredit the information by planting screenshots digitally manipulated in Photoshop purporting to show a connection between Baba Jukwa and Amai Jukwa, a columnist with The Herald.
It would be then alleged that the same administrator was behind the two accounts. The information would be supplied to sympathetic media houses as the work of foreign hackers.
Sources within the intelligence services who spoke to The Sunday Mail dismissed the alleged plot saying there were investigations in June 2013 which established that the accounts were being run by different people.
A police officer familiar with the investigations who wished to remain anonymous citing the sensitivity around the investigations laughed off the planned association and said the police knew who they were investigating and would not be distracted by attempts to fabricate evidence.
Last week some media reports suggested that The Sunday Mail Editor Edmund Kudzayi was behind the Amai Jukwa character. In a ZiFM Stereo interview on Wednesday last week, Kudzayi dismissed the insinuation as harmless mischief.
Last night Kudzayi jokingly responded to the rumours saying whoever was behind the character deserved a farm.
"Quite
sadly, I am not Amai Jukwa but Iet it be on record certainly would love
to be. I follow her column weekly and am impressed by the nationalist
blood that runs so vibrantly in that old woman's veins as well as her
intellectual clarity of thought. Whoever is behind that column certainly
deserves The Zimbabwe Order of Merit or at the very least a farm. In
fact, I would love to offer her a well-paying job at The Sunday Mail,"
he said in a telephone interview.
The Herald Editor Caesar Zvayi also likened associating Baba Jukwa and Amai Jukwa to mistaking water and oil saying Amai Jukwa was a mainstream columnist just like Nathaniel Manheru and Bra Gee, who both prefer pseudonyms but are well known to the senior editorial team at The Herald.
"Mai Jukwa is an individual and cannot be likened to Baba Jukwa who has been exposed as a legion of collaborators operating in what has been called the lunatic fringe of the media, Mai Jukwa is seriously mainstream," Zvayi said.
The Jukwa family began as harmless online banter on the forums of online tabloid NewZimbabwe.com with a pro-Zanu PF character calling himself Jukwa. This was followed by a self-appointed wife of Jukwa that was also pro-Zanu PF that called herself Amai Jukwa in November 2012.
The Amai Jukwa character was then invited to run a column on NewZimbabwe.com which led to offers from print publications. Amai Jukwa quickly amassed an online following on the Facebook social network prompting a pro-MDC copycat page from Mxolisi Ncube and Mkhululi Chimoio which they named Baba Jukwa and launched in March 2013.
Amai Jukwa's Facebook page was closed by Facebook sometime in 2013.
Last week The Herald reported the suspected involvement of a team of New Zealand-based hackers in the operation to seize control of data from an email account connected to the Baba Jukwa syndicate. New documents seen by The Herald paint the picture of a highly sophisticated operation in which the team made use of a command-and-control server based in Australia where they stored seized data before siphoning it into a number of servers.
Questions remain as to how the authorities got access to the data.
There has been a growth in State sponsored hacking with a former NSA contractor Edward Snowden alleging widespread hacking by the United States. The Chinese military has also been accused of running hacking operations under PLA Unit 61938. Meanwhile, other nationalist hackers such as the Syrian Electronic Army have no direct ties to Governments.
The authorities have remained curiously tight lipped over the issue with none of the security services coming forward to confirm or deny allegations the intelligence services were involved in the hacking of private emails.
A source with ties to Ncube last night claimed that there were plans to try and discredit the increasingly damaging publication of emails that were authored by the pair and their collaborators.
One of the plans, the source said, was to try and discredit the information by planting screenshots digitally manipulated in Photoshop purporting to show a connection between Baba Jukwa and Amai Jukwa, a columnist with The Herald.
It would be then alleged that the same administrator was behind the two accounts. The information would be supplied to sympathetic media houses as the work of foreign hackers.
Sources within the intelligence services who spoke to The Sunday Mail dismissed the alleged plot saying there were investigations in June 2013 which established that the accounts were being run by different people.
A police officer familiar with the investigations who wished to remain anonymous citing the sensitivity around the investigations laughed off the planned association and said the police knew who they were investigating and would not be distracted by attempts to fabricate evidence.
Last week some media reports suggested that The Sunday Mail Editor Edmund Kudzayi was behind the Amai Jukwa character. In a ZiFM Stereo interview on Wednesday last week, Kudzayi dismissed the insinuation as harmless mischief.
Last night Kudzayi jokingly responded to the rumours saying whoever was behind the character deserved a farm.
The Herald Editor Caesar Zvayi also likened associating Baba Jukwa and Amai Jukwa to mistaking water and oil saying Amai Jukwa was a mainstream columnist just like Nathaniel Manheru and Bra Gee, who both prefer pseudonyms but are well known to the senior editorial team at The Herald.
"Mai Jukwa is an individual and cannot be likened to Baba Jukwa who has been exposed as a legion of collaborators operating in what has been called the lunatic fringe of the media, Mai Jukwa is seriously mainstream," Zvayi said.
The Jukwa family began as harmless online banter on the forums of online tabloid NewZimbabwe.com with a pro-Zanu PF character calling himself Jukwa. This was followed by a self-appointed wife of Jukwa that was also pro-Zanu PF that called herself Amai Jukwa in November 2012.
The Amai Jukwa character was then invited to run a column on NewZimbabwe.com which led to offers from print publications. Amai Jukwa quickly amassed an online following on the Facebook social network prompting a pro-MDC copycat page from Mxolisi Ncube and Mkhululi Chimoio which they named Baba Jukwa and launched in March 2013.
Amai Jukwa's Facebook page was closed by Facebook sometime in 2013.
Last week The Herald reported the suspected involvement of a team of New Zealand-based hackers in the operation to seize control of data from an email account connected to the Baba Jukwa syndicate. New documents seen by The Herald paint the picture of a highly sophisticated operation in which the team made use of a command-and-control server based in Australia where they stored seized data before siphoning it into a number of servers.
Questions remain as to how the authorities got access to the data.
There has been a growth in State sponsored hacking with a former NSA contractor Edward Snowden alleging widespread hacking by the United States. The Chinese military has also been accused of running hacking operations under PLA Unit 61938. Meanwhile, other nationalist hackers such as the Syrian Electronic Army have no direct ties to Governments.
Source - The Herald