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WB3C joins UK's regional CybHER initiative empowering women and girls for cyber careers

07.11.2025

Image for WB3C joins UK's regional CybHER initiative empowering women and girls for cyber careers

We are proud to be part of the regional CybHER initiative by the British Council, designed to empower girls and women across the Western Balkans to pursue and thrive in cyber careers. For the WB3C, CybHER is not only a regional effort we support, but also a concrete opportunity to invest in our own people and create space for their professional development.

As part of this, WB3C took part in two CybHER components:
1️⃣ A leadership program for early-career women in cybersecurity.
2️⃣ A workshop on gender-sensitive HR policies for cybersecurity organizations.

1. Leadership skills for early-career women in cyber

Our colleague Vanja Radović is representing the WB3C in the CybHER leadership track for young women in cybersecurity. This program is designed to help participants gain both the mindset and the skills needed to grow and lead in a still male-dominated industry. Over the course of the program, participants will:

💡 Build authentic leadership skills by exploring their personal values, leadership styles and emotional intelligence.
💡 Discover diverse cybersecurity career paths and map concrete options for their own development.
💡 Learn practical strategies to navigate stereotypes, bias and workplace barriers with confidence.
💡 Strengthen networking and collaboration skills to build a reliable support system in the sector.
💡 Develop a personal action plan to apply what they learn in their daily work.

We are especially glad that Vanja will learn from experienced regional leaders such as Larisa Halilovic, an international leadership expert, and Andreja Mihailović, PhD, President of Women4Cyber Montenegro, whose guidance connects technical careers with the human skills needed for leadership.

2. Gender-sensitive HR policies in cybersecurity organisations

In parallel, WB3C also joined the CybHER workshop on gender-sensitive HR policies in cybersecurity organizations, focusing on how organizational systems can either open doors for women - or quietly keep them closed. This component, was followed by our colleague Vanja Madzgalj, responsible for strategic communications and with substantive experience in gender mainstreaming, in order to:

💡 Exchange experiences and good practices between companies on inclusive and fair HR approaches.
💡 Look at domestic and international trends in gender-sensitive and inclusive HR in tech and cybersecurity.
💡 Examine how bias, discrimination, the glass ceiling and everyday prejudices show up in recruitment, promotion and leadership opportunities.
💡 Explore practical ways to improve the full HR cycle: from inclusive job descriptions and selection processes, to advancement, leadership roles and supportive workplace culture.
💡 Discuss mechanisms for safety and confidential reporting, and how policies can better protect and empower staff who experience harassment or discrimination.

The workshop concluded with self-assessment of existing HR practices, individual commitments for change and first steps towards mentoring and peer support, so that policy discussions can translate into everyday practice.

At the Western Balkans Cyber Capacity Centre (WB3C), we believe that real change happens when we work on both people and systems. By empowering our own female colleagues through programs like CybHER, and by strengthening HR and organizational practices that support them, we are investing in a cybersecurity community where women can enter, stay, grow and lead.

 


Day 2 at the Forum INCYBER (FIC), Lille, France

Western Balkans delegation had a productive day at the cybersecurity industry fair in Lille. First, they participated in a panel discussion dedicated to the topic of cybersecurity of critical infrastructure. The discussion highlighted regional experiences, key challenges and priorities in protecting critical entities while opening a direct exchange with European counterparts and exchanging views on emerging issues in critical infrastructure protection.
There was a strong interest from the audience which led to a lively discussion, opening numerous related questions. 
The panel ensured that perspectives from the region are part of the broader cybersecurity conversation and that the region receives visibility in one of the leading European industry events. 

The afternoon was reserved for attending presentations by a selected number of cybersecurity companies, followed by targeted B2B meet-ups. These meetings enabled direct introductions, exchange of practical solutions, and exploration of potential cooperation with industry partners.

Today was an excellent day for creating concrete opportunities for future cooperation and partnership development.
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Photo credit: Forum INCYBER (FIC)

Western Balkans at the Forum INCYBER in Lille, France

For the second year in a row, WB3C is organizing a regional study visit to Lille, where the Forum INCYBER (FIC) 2026 is taking place — one of Europe’s leading cybersecurity events and a key meeting point for public authorities, critical infrastructure operators, industry leaders and cybersecurity experts shaping the continent’s digital security agenda.
Our delegation has arrived today to take part in this three-day forum, engaging in discussions, exchanges, and partnership-building with European counterparts.
Beyond participation, this visit carries a forward-looking objective. Throughout the Forum, the delegation — led by Gilles Schwoerer and Maja Miranovic — will engage in a series of conversations on bringing a similar industry event to Podgorica this summer, marking the launch of the first industry event of this kind in the Western Balkans.
Our regional delegation brings together representatives from across institutions including national cybersecurity authorities, critical infrastructure, private sector and regional organizations: 

  • Samir Orahovac, Acting Director of National Cyber Security Agency of Montenegro;
  • Jovan Kljajić, President of a Council of National Cyber Security Agency of Montenegro;
  • Spasoje Zecevic, Infrastructure Manager at Science-Technology Park, Montenegro;
  • Dragan Radulović, President of Association of Security Managers of Montenegro and incoming President of South-East Europe Association;
  • Metodi Hadјi Janev, Cybersecurity Solutions Strategist at CDRF Global & Professor at Military Academy, Skopje, North Macedonia;
  • Predrag Puharic, CEO at Cyber Security Excellence Centre and Vice Mayor of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Hercegovina;
  • Mladen Bukilic, CISO / SOC Manager at Cikom
  • Tanja Maraš, Expert on Digital Connectivity at Regional Cooperation Council (RCC), Bosnia and Hercegovina. 

During the Forum, WB3C will also contribute through a dedicated panel focused on the cybersecurity of critical infrastructure, ensuring that regional perspectives are part of the broader European conversation.

Training for Investigators and Prosecutors Under EU4FAST Programme

Last week, in cooperation with EU4FAST, WB3C delivered a second four-day regional training under the Cybercrime pillar aimed to strengthen the foundations of criminal investigations involving online and digitally enabled crimes. 
The training was dedicated to police investigators and prosecutors from the region, focusing strongly not only on technical skills, but also on strengthening cooperation between these two functions within the criminal justice system. 
As cybercrime cases increasingly rely on complex digital evidence, effective case-building depends on early and continuous coordination between those who investigate and those who prosecute. Bringing these two communities together in a single training environment is therefore a deliberate approach aimed at improving mutual understanding, aligning methodologies, and ultimately strengthening the overall quality of criminal proceedings.
The programme was structured around three core components:
• Typologies of cyber and cyber-enabled crime
• OSINT and dark web investigations
• Cryptocurrencies and blockchain in criminal investigations 

The course combined theory and practical exercises, prompting the participants to work together through shared challenges and better understand each other’s roles in handling digital evidence. The training was delivered by delivered by WB3C’s in-house trainers Yannick Casse and Cyril C. 
The multi-donor action "EU Support to Strengthen the Fight against Migrant Smuggling and Trafficking in Human Beings in the Western Balkans” (EU4FAST) is implemented by a consortium of partners: the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), the Austrian Ministry of Interior, the German Federal Police (Bundespolizei), the Dutch Center for International Legal Cooperation (CILC), the international technical cooperation operator of the French Ministry of the Interior CIVIPOL, the Croatian Ministry of the Interior, the Italian Ministry of the Interior and the Slovenian Ministry of the Interior.

 


 


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Disclaimer: Translations of the original content written in English into other languages are AI generated by Weglot.