The Albanian government confirmed and apologized Thursday for a data leak that exposed personal information and salaries for 637.138 citizens, more than 22% of the country's total population.
Details such as names, ID numbers, salaries, positions work and employer names were shared over the weekend on WhatsApp in an Excel document.
The document included tax and payroll data submitted by companies to the Albanian government for the month of January 2021, according to local media information.
In a press conference today, Prime Minister Edi Rama confirmed and apologized for the leak.
"According to a preliminary analysis, it looks more like an internal leak than an external cyber attack," Rama told reporters, according to the Associated Press.
The leak is being investigated by the Tirana Prosecutor's Office, a government spokesman said.
Services such as the Tax Office and the Social Security Institute will investigate their activities, local media reported, as they are the only ones who would manage payroll information and may be the possible source of the leak.
The incident marks the second major leak of government data after the figures of more than 910.000 citizens leaked in April, just before the election.
This leak is believed to be a copy of it bases data on the country's voters provided to the ruling party, the Socialist Party, for electoral purposes.
Following the second leak this week, the Democratic Party has now formally demanded Rama's resignation, accusing him of leaking salary information for political reasons.
Copies of the leaked Excel file are circulating in channela of the Telegram app and will likely be used by scammers to select future targets.