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After cyberattack, Russia's Aeroflot cancels additional flights but claims that the schedule has now been'stabilised.'

The Russian airline Aeroflot has cancelled dozens of flights again on Tuesday, but says that it now has a stable schedule following a major cyber attack a day before.

On Monday, two pro-Ukraine hacking teams claimed to have conducted a year-long effort to penetrate Aeroflot’s network. They claimed to have crippled 7,000 server, taken data from passengers and employees, and taken control of the computers of senior managers.

Interfax reported that Aeroflot cancelled 59 return flights to Moscow from a total of 260 planned on Monday. The news agency said that 22 more flights were cancelled out of Moscow on Tuesday and 31 in the capital.

Aeroflot's timetable online showed that, except for one flight, all 22 flights cancelled on Tuesday were scheduled to depart before 10 a.m. Moscow Time (0700 GMT), though the schedule of the rest of the afternoon appeared largely unchanged.

The company stated that "as of today, 93% (216 out of 233) of the flights to and from Moscow will be operated in accordance with the original schedule."

Aeroflot's flight schedule stabilised after the selective cancellations of flights until 10:00.

The attack on Monday caused many cancellations and heavy delays in air travel throughout the largest country in the world. Affected passengers were angry.

The Belarusian Cyber Partisans - a group with a long history of opposing President Alexander Lukashenko - and a hacking group more recent and shadowy, Silent Crow, claimed responsibility.

The cyberattack in Russia was described by Russian lawmakers as a wakeup call. They said that investigators must not only focus on those responsible for the attack, but also on those who allowed it to occur. Reporting by Mark Trevelyan, Anastasia Teterevleva and Andrew Osborn; Editing by Andrew Osborn

(source: Reuters)