German interior minister sacks head of national cybersecurity agency

Ministry starts disciplinary procedure against cybersecurity chief amid alleged links to Russian intelligence agencies
German interior minister sacks head of national cybersecurity agency

Germany’s interior minister has dismissed the head of the national cybersecurity agency, local media reported on Tuesday.

Nancy Faeser sacked Arne Schonbohm, president of the Federal Office for Information Security (BSI), from his post with immediate effect, German Press Agency (dpa) quoted a ministry spokesman as saying.

According to the weekly news magazine Der Spiegel, the ministry has also launched a disciplinary procedure against Schonbohm.

Earlier, German ZDF public broadcasting network reported about links of the BSI president to an obscure association called “Cyber-Sicherheitsrat Deutschland e. V.” The association is said to have contacts with Russian intelligence agencies. Schonbohm was the founding president of the group until 2016.

Berlin-based security circles had taken this case very seriously. Security authorities were quoted as saying that they would now “turn over every stone” with regards to the activities of the club.

It would also look at which companies needed software from the Russian provider Protelion (formerly Infotecs). Protelion used its membership in the association “Cyber ​​Security Council Germany” for the distribution of the possibly insecure software.