
IMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS Image caption, UN officials have repeatedly warned that Kim Jong-Un’s regime poses a significant cyber threat
Between 2020 and mid-2021 cyber-attackers stole more than $50m (£37m) of digital assets, investigators found.
Such attacks are an “important revenue source” for Pyongyang’s nuclear and ballistic missile programme, they said.
The findings were reportedly handed to the UN’s sanctions committee on Friday.
The cyber-attacks targeted at least three cryptocurrency exchanges in North America, Europe, and Asia.
The report also referenced a study published last month by the security firm Chainalysis that suggested North Korean cyberattacks could have netted as much as $400m worth of digital assets last year.
North Korea has been banned by the UN Security Council from carrying out nuclear tests and launching ballistic missiles.
However the UN report says that despite crippling sanctions, North Korea has been able to continue developing its nuclear and ballistic missile infrastructure.
The sanctions monitors said there had been a “marked acceleration” of missile testing by Pyongyang.
The US said on Friday that North Korea – formally known as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) – carried out nine missile tests last month alone. .
On Friday, China and Russia refused to sign onto a statement condemning the proliferation of North Korea’s missile launches.
On Sunday, the US announced that its special representative for North Korea would meet with Japanese and South Korean officials later this week to discuss the situation.
The UN report also found that the humanitarian situation in North Korea was continuing to worsen. It said this was likely to be the result of the country’s decision to close its borders during the pandemic.
A lack of information from North Korea meant it was hard to determine how much suffering was being caused by international sanctions, it said.