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S Koreans cancel credit cards after data theft

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Tens of thousands of South Koreans flooded banks and call centres yesterday to cancel credit cards following the unprecedented theft of the personal data of at least 20 million people.

Since Monday, more than 1.15 million victims of the country's largest-ever leak of private financial information have cancelled their credit cards permanently or requested new ones, according to the Financial Supervisory Service.

The panic has its roots in the arrest earlier this month of an employee from personal credit ratings firm Korea Credit Bureau, on charges of stealing and selling data from customers of three credit card firms while working as a temporary consultant, AFP reported.

On Sunday, financial regulators announced that at least 20 million people - in a country of 50 million - had been victims of the data theft.

The data stolen from the internal servers of KB Kookmin Card, Lotte Card and NH Nonghyup Card included names, social security numbers, phone numbers, e-mail addresses, credit card numbers and expiration dates.

The three firms deployed thousands of extra workers to branches and call centres to handle the complaints and cancellations that poured in when the extent of the scam became apparent.

"We've been totally overwhelmed for the past two days," said one official at KB Kookmin Card.

Social networking sites and major Internet portals were deluged with complaints about the long wait at bank branches and problems with paralysed websites and call centres.

"I tried the call centre for more than six hours with no success, and eventually had to go to the bank to wait nearly an hour to cancel my credit card," said one NH Nonghyup customer.

"I'm at Lotte Card (office) to cancel my card. They say I have to wait six hours!" tweeted another angry customer, @casiopea1027.

All special call centres run by the three firms were busy yesterday and some of their websites could not be accessed at all.

Dozens of their top executives have tendered their resignations, while the government is expected to announce special measures aimed at preventing a similar crisis in the future.

Regulators have launched investigations into security measures at the affected firms.