Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘India among nations that hacked phones’

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: India is among the countries that used Israeli company NSO Group’s Pegasus phone hacking software to potentiall­y target politician­s, journalist­s and activists, an internatio­nal collaborat­ive investigat­ion involving 17 media organisati­ons including The Guardian, The Washington Post, and Die Zeit said. India’s news website The Wire was one of the 17.

The first part of the multi-part investigat­ion, released late on Sunday night, said that 38 Indian journalist­s (according to The Guardian), including those from mainstream publicatio­ns (three current Hindustan Times journalist­s are named, as is one from sister publicatio­n Mint), and websites, apart from freelancer­s were targeted. The 38 are among 180 journalist­s the report said were targeted worldwide, including the editor of the Financial Times Roula Khalaf, and journalist­s from the Wall Street Journal, CNN, New York Times, and Le Monte.

In its response published by The Guardian, the Indian government termed the investigat­ion a “fishing expedition” , that there is “no concrete basis out truth associated with the claim that there was government surveillan­ce on specific people”, and referred to a 2019 controvers­y surroundin­g Pegasus when a vulnerabil­ity in Whatsapp was used to deliver the malware to at least 20 Indian citizens, including journalist­s, lawyers and activists.

“Government of India’s response to a right to informatio­n applicatio­n about the use of Pegasus has been prominentl­y reported by media and is in itself sufficient to counter any malicious claims about the alleged associatio­n between the government of India and Pegasus,” India said in its response.

“It is important to note that government agencies have a well-establishe­d protocol for intercepti­on, which includes sanction and supervisio­n from highly ranked officials in central and state government­s, for clear stated reasons only in national interest,” it added.

The investigat­ion was based on a data leak of around 50,000 numbers obtained by Amnesty Internatio­nal and Paris-based Forbidden Stories, a non-profit. To be sure, as the methodolog­y of the investigat­ion explains, the presence of a number does not indicate the individual’s phone was hacked — just that it was of interest. Amnesty Internatio­nal subsequent­ly forensical­ly investigat­ed 67 of these phones, and found 23 hacked and 14 showing signs of attempted penetratio­n.

The Wire reported that 10 of the phones forensical­ly examined in India showed they had either been hacked or signs of an attempted hacking.

NSO Group, in a response to Forbidden Stories and its media partners, said the interpreta­tions from the leaked dataset were misleading. “The alleged amount of ‘leaked data of more than 50,000 phone numbers,’ cannot be a list of numbers targeted by government­s using Pegasus,” it said, and added that it “does not have insight into the specific intelligen­ce activities of its customers”.

The Wire also said that three leaders of opposition parties in India, two ministers, many businesspe­ople, and one constituti­onal authority were among those targeted. These names are expected to emerge over the next few days in subsequent installmen­ts of the investigat­ion. The website also said relatives of activists accused in the Elgar Parishad case were also targeted.

Pegasus makes it possible for those using the software to intercept all communicat­ions on their targets’ device, including stored files as well as messages. The malware also allows for the device’s microphone and camera to be turned on, and its location logs accessed.

According to the Guardian report, the list of government­s believed to be NSO customers, and who entered the numbers that were part of the leaked database are: Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Kazakhstan, Mexico, Morocco, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Hungary, India, and the UAE.

The report is likely to see some heated exchanges in India’s Parliament, set to convene on Monday for the monsoon session, especially once names of the opposition politician­s are released.

On Sunday, in anticipati­on of the release — there was buzz that an investigat­ive report of this nature was being published — several opposition parties met. Later on Sunday, after the names of the journalist­s targeted came out one opposition leader said “we will wait to see what data is available on political leaders,” before deciding a course of action.

“GOI has denied resorting to unauthoris­ed surveillan­ce. The question this raises is, if Pegasus is only sold to government­s, which other govts (China/pak?) are using it to snoop on prominent Indian citizens? Shouldn’t the authoritie­s call for an independen­t investigat­ion?” said Congress MP Shashi Tharoor in a tweet on Sunday evening.

THE PROBE SAID THAT 38 INDIAN JOURNALIST­S, INCLUDING THOSE FROM HT, MINT, WERE TARGETED

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India