Two months after the blockbuster revelations of the US National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, state-owned Belgacom said its computers had been hacked and a formal complaint filed to Belgian prosecutors.
Prosecutors said the hacking could have only been done by an entity "with significant financial and logistical means" and that suspicions were circling on an act of "international state espionage".
On the basis of the information so far, the aim was probably "to gather strategic information" rather than to "sabotage or to cause economic damage," the prosecutors said.
The country will raise cyber-security issues with its European partners, he said, adding that he understood France had suffered similar incidents.
The servers belonged to employees of Belgacom and did not involve customers' data or communications, the company said.
But Belgian media today directed their suspicions at the NSA, the super-secret security agency exposed by Snowden as a snooper of multi-national institutions, embassies, and even the United States' closest allies.
This included covert and systematic surveillance of EU offices, diplomatic missions in Washington and at the United Nations in New York.
Belgium said it would take "appropriate action" if the involvement of a foreign government was confirmed.
According to the newspaper, the real target of the snooping was BICS, a unit of Belgacom also owned by Swisscom and MTN, the South African operator.
BICS operates huge volumes of phone and data traffic in Africa and the Middle East. The United States was especially interested in communications involving Yemen, Syria and other nations deemed suspicious by Washington security agencies, the newspaper said.
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