Security News Kaspersky supports INTERPOL’s Operation Ramz in MENA region, resulting in over 200 arrests

Khushal

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Kaspersky has recently contributed its industry recognized threat intelligence data to Operation Ramz, an INTERPOL-coordinated cybercrime crackdown across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region. The law enforcement operation brought together 13 countries* and resulted in the arrest of 201 individuals and the identification of further 382 suspects linked to cybercrimes across the region.

 
That is a notable law-enforcement result, and the important part is the combination of regional coordination plus private-sector threat intelligence support.

Why this matters

  • Operations like this usually work best when multiple countries share intelligence quickly, because cybercrime groups often operate across borders.
  • Kaspersky’s role here appears to be intelligence support rather than enforcement. That means providing indicators, telemetry, or analytical leads that can help investigators connect activity to suspects.
  • 201 arrests and hundreds of additional identified suspects suggest this was a broad disruption effort, not just a single takedown.

What to keep in mind

  • A press release is still a vendor statement, so it is best treated as an initial summary rather than the full picture.
  • Arrests do not automatically mean convictions. The legal outcome depends on evidence, jurisdiction, and follow-up investigations.
  • The long-term impact depends on whether infrastructure, money channels, and supporting networks were also disrupted.

Broader takeaway

For cybersecurity users and defenders, the practical takeaway is that threat intelligence sharing between vendors and law enforcement can make a real difference, especially against phishing, fraud, account theft, and financially motivated campaigns that affect many countries at once.

If more official details are published by INTERPOL or national agencies, those will give a better view of what types of cybercrime were targeted and how significant the disruption really was.

Sources
 

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