An Australian regional food co-operative has been named by a ransomware group in connection with an alleged cyber incident, according to recent reporting from cybersecurity monitoring sources.
The Qilin ransomware group has listed Mount Barker Co‑operative on its darknet leak site, claiming it gained unauthorised access to the organisation’s systems and copied internal data. The group alleges that approximately 40 GB of data, consisting of tens of thousands of files, was obtained.
At the time of reporting, these claims have not been independently verified. No publicly available evidence has been released to confirm the nature or extent of any data access.
Mount Barker Co-operative has not issued a detailed public statement confirming or denying the data theft claim. The organisation is understood to be assessing the situation, which is consistent with standard practice during active cyber incident investigations.
No information has been disclosed regarding potential ransom demands, negotiations, or operational disruption. There has also been no confirmation of customer or employee data exposure.
Cybersecurity analysts note that ransomware groups frequently publish claims on leak sites as a pressure tactic, and such listings do not automatically confirm a breach until verified by the affected organisation or independent investigators.
The incident reflects a broader trend in which ransomware operations are increasingly targeting regional and community-based organisations, including retailers and supply-chain entities, rather than focusing solely on large corporations.
Investigations into the alleged incident are ongoing, and further details may emerge if official confirmation or forensic findings are released.
