Friday, March 13


Bengaluru: Medical device maker Stryker said on Thursday a cyberattack that hit its computer systems a day earlier is causing widespread disruption to its business, including its ability to ‌process ⁠orders, make ⁠products and ship them to customers.

An Iranian-linked ​hacking group called Handala claimed responsibility for the ​attack, saying it was in retaliation to a strike on a girls’ ​school in Minab, southern ⁠Iran.

The school ‌was hit on the first ​day ​of U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran, ⁠killing an estimated 150 students, according ​to Iran’s ambassador to the ​U.N. in Geneva, Ali Bahreini. Reuters has not independently verified the figure.

Stryker first disclosed the issue on March 11, saying it had experienced a ‌global disruption to its Microsoft environment.

The incident has not affected ​any patient-related ​services and ⁠its connected medical products, the company said, even though the full scale and financial ​impact are not yet known.

The company, which has 56,000 employees and operations in 61 countries, said its investigation is ongoing.

(Reporting by Kamal Choudhury in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur)

  • Published On Mar 13, 2026 at 08:09 AM IST

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