HANOI – In a landmark moment for global digital security, 65 nations signed the United Nations Convention Against Cybercrime in Hanoi on Saturday, marking the first comprehensive international treaty to combat rising cyber threats like ransomware and online fraud that cost the world economy trillions annually.
Hosted by Vietnam in collaboration with the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the signing ceremony drew diplomats, officials, and experts from regions including the U.S., EU, China, and Africa. UN Secretary-General António Guterres hailed it as a “historic step toward a safer digital world,” urging swift ratification to turn signatures into action.
The treaty, adopted by the UN General Assembly on December 24, 2024, after seven years of negotiations led by Russia, establishes standards for criminalizing cyber offences, sharing electronic evidence, and enhancing cross-border cooperation. It will enter into force 90 days after the 40th ratification.
Treaty Highlights
The convention addresses a wide range of cyber-dependent and cyber-enabled crimes, including:
- Illegal access, data interference, and ransomware attacks.
- Online fraud, identity theft, and money laundering.
- Child sexual abuse and exploitation material, including grooming and non-consensual dissemination of intimate images.
- Computer-related forgery and critical infrastructure attacks.
Key provisions include:
- A 24/7 global network for rapid cooperation on urgent cases.
- Mandatory electronic evidence sharing within 12 hours for serious offences.
- Mutual legal assistance for arrests, asset seizures, and domain takedowns.
- Capacity-building commitments from developed nations to support developing countries with training and technology.
- Victim protections, including rights to compensation and privacy safeguards.
The treaty recognizes non-consensual intimate image sharing as an offence and promotes ethical hacking guidelines.
Global Support
Signatories include Vietnam, Russia, India, the U.S., Germany, Brazil, Nigeria, Japan, and France, with the EU, African Union, and ASEAN endorsing the pact. Vietnam’s Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh presided over the ceremony at the National Convention Center, featuring high-level roundtables and side events on international cooperation.
Guterres, addressing the event virtually, praised Vietnam’s role: “It is fitting that this takes place in a nation that has embraced technology and become essential to the world’s digital supply chains.”
UNODC Executive Director Ghada Waly emphasized: “This is the first global framework for electronic evidence in serious crimes. We must ratify and implement swiftly for a safer digital world.”
The U.S. State Department called it a “historic step toward global cyber resilience.” China’s Ministry of Public Security viewed it as “essential for digital sovereignty.”
Broader Context
Cybercrime costs are projected to reach $10.5 trillion annually by 2025, per Cybersecurity Ventures, with a 600% surge since 2020, according to Interpol. The treaty fills gaps in the 2001 Budapest Convention, ratified by only 69 countries, by providing broader coverage and capacity building for developing nations.
Negotiations, proposed by Russia in 2017, overcame U.S.-China tensions on data sovereignty and human rights, balancing law enforcement with privacy protections requiring judicial oversight.
It aligns with the UN’s Global Digital Compact (2024) and EU’s Digital Services Act, fostering unified responses to threats like the 2024 LockBit ransomware wave.
Market Reaction
Global cybersecurity stocks surged on Monday, with the First Trust NASDAQ Cybersecurity ETF up 1.2% to $52.40. CrowdStrike Holdings rose 2.1% to $378.50, Palo Alto Networks gained 1.8%, and Vietnam’s VN-Index tech sector climbed 0.9%. Morgan Stanley analysts predict the treaty could unlock $15 billion in annual cybersecurity investments by 2030.
Challenges
Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International criticized the treaty’s broad definitions of “illegal content,” warning Article 21 could enable authoritarian censorship of dissent.
The Cybersecurity Tech Accord, representing Meta, Microsoft, and 160+ firms, labeled it a “surveillance treaty” that risks criminalizing ethical hackers and facilitating unchecked data sharing among governments.
Developing nations face high compliance costs, with UNODC estimating $500 million annually for training and infrastructure. Only 12 countries ratified similar treaties within a year, per UN data.
Quotes
Guterres said: “Now we must turn signatures into action. The Convention must be ratified quickly, implemented fully, and supported with funding, training, and technology—especially for developing countries.”
Waly added: “No country can fight cybercrime alone. This treaty gives law enforcement the tools to act globally.”
U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield: “Cybercrime knows no borders. This treaty ensures justice does too.”
Broader Industry Trends
Global cybersecurity spending hit $188 billion in 2025, up 12% year-over-year, per Gartner. Ransomware payments reached $1.1 billion in 2024, per Chainalysis.
The treaty complements national efforts: the U.S. CISA issued 1,200 cyber alerts in 2025; China’s National Vulnerability Database grew 40%; and India launched Cyber Surakshit Bharat.
International cooperation disrupted 15 major cybercrime networks in 2025, including REvil and LockBit, per Europol.
Outlook
The Hanoi signing aims for 50 ratifications by 2026, triggering entry into force. UNODC plans a $200 million trust fund for implementation.
Deloitte forecasts a 25% drop in cross-border cybercrime within five years of full ratification, saving $2.6 trillion annually.
As digital threats evolve, the UN treaty positions Hanoi as the epicenter of a new global cyber order—uniting nations to secure the internet for all.






