The threat activity cluster known as SloppyLemming has been attributed to a fresh set of attacks targeting government entities and critical infrastructure operators in Pakistan and Bangladesh.
The activity, per Arctic Wolf, took place between January 2025 and January 2026. It involves the use of two distinct attack chains to deliver malware families tracked as BurrowShell and a Rust-based keylogger.
“The use of the Rust programming language represents a notable evolution in SloppyLemming’s tooling, as prior reporting documented the actor using only traditional compiled languages and borrowed adversary simulation frameworks such as Cobalt Strike, Havoc, and the custom NekroWire RAT,” the cybersecurity company said in a report shared with The Hacker News.
SloppyLemming is the moniker assigned to a threat actor that’s known to target government, law enforcement, energy, telecommunications, and technology entities in Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and China since at least 2022. It’s also tracked under the names Outrider Tiger and Fishing Elephant.
Prior campaigns mounted by the hacking crew have leveraged malware families like Ares RAT and WarHawk, which are often attributed to SideCopy and SideWinder, respectively.
ArcticWolf’s analysis of the latest attacks has uncovered the use of spear-phishing emails to deliver PDF lures and macro-enabled Excel documents to kick-start the infection chains. It described the threat actor as operating with moderate capability.
The PDF decoys contain URLs designed to lead victims to ClickOnce application manifests, which then deploy a legitimate Microsoft .NET runtime executable (“NGenTask.exe”) and a malicious loader (“mscorsvc.dll”). The loader is launched using DLL side-loading to decrypt and execute a custom x64 shellcode implant codenamed BurrowShell.
“BurrowShell is a full-featured backdoor providing the threat actor with file system manipulation, screenshot capture capabilities, remote shell execution, and SOCKS proxy capabilities for network tunneling,” Arctic Wolf said. “The implant masquerades its command-and-control (C2) traffic as Windows Update service communications and employs RC4 encryption with a 32-character key for payload protection.”
The second attack chain employs Excel documents containing malicious macros to drop the keylogger malware, while also incorporating features to conduct port scanning and network enumeration.
Further investigation of the threat actor’s infrastructure has identified 112 Cloudflare Workers domains registered during the one-year time period, marking an eight-fold jump from the 13 domains flagged by Cloudflare in September 2024.
The campaign’s links to SloppyLemming are based on continued exploitation of Cloudflare Workers infrastructure with government-themed typo-squatting patterns, deployment of the Havoc C2 framework, DLL side-loading techniques, and victimology patterns.
It’s worth noting that some aspects of the threat actor’s tradecraft, including the use of ClickOnce-enabled execution, overlap with a recent SideWinder campaign documented by Trellix in October 2025.
“In particular, the targeting of Pakistani nuclear regulatory bodies, defense logistics organizations, and telecommunications infrastructure – alongside Bangladeshi energy utilities and financial institutions – aligns with intelligence collection priorities consistent with regional strategic competition in South Asia,” Arctic Wolf said.
“The deployment of dual payloads – the in-memory shellcode BurrowShell for C2 and SOCKS proxy operations, and a Rust-based keylogger for information stealing – suggests the threat actor maintains flexibility to deploy appropriate tools based on target value and operational requirements.”


